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Summer issue of ‘Georgia Review’ features interview with novelist Salman Rushdie

The recently published summer 2012 issue of The Georgia Review opens with “Look at the World as It Is,” a lengthy interview with Sir Salman Rushdie, whose 1998 novel The Satanic Verses drove him into more than a decade of seclusion after Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa, an international injunction urging Muslims to kill the India-born writer. The interview, a sketch of Rushdie’s entire writing life, was conducted by Anis Shivani himself a controversial figure known for his often-scathing criticism of American writers and literary culture.

Also featured in the issue are related essays by Georgia Review veteran Scott Russell Sanders and newcomer Krista Eastman. Sanders meditates on “The Power of Imagination,” noting that only the human mind can “move backward and forward through time” or transfer a “vision from a writer’s mind to a reader’s mind.” With her “Insider’s Almanac,” Eastman, who lives on the edge of the aptly named Driftless region in Wisconsin, argues and demonstrates that “one way to share your home is to place it carefully, in a controlled way, onto someone else’s map.”

Fiction writer Kent Nelson returns to the Review with “La Mer de L’Ouest,” a sequel of sorts to his story “Tides,” which appeared in the summer 2000 Georgia Review and then was selected for inclusion in The Best American Mystery Stories 2001.

Pulitzer Prize winner Stephen Dunn and National Book Award winner Gerald Stern head up a handful of standout poets; Judith Kitchen celebrates her 22nd year as a regular reviewer of poetry for the journal; and Mary Brodbeck’s brightly colored, Japanese-influenced woodblock prints are complemented by Heather Sellers’ essay “Sheltered: Finding Home through the Art of Mary Brodbeck.”

For more information on current, past or future issues, including the special fall focus on members of the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame and the newly available digital version, call 706-542-3481 or visit www.thegeorgiareview.com.

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