Article 62QGM Walking with Salman Rushdie to a tube station now seems like a distant age | Rachel Cooke

Walking with Salman Rushdie to a tube station now seems like a distant age | Rachel Cooke

by
Rachel Cooke
from US news | The Guardian on (#62QGM)
After our interview, he offered to take me there even though he clearly had no idea where he was going

Lots of journalists have Salman Rushdie stories. He likes to talk and he is generous with his time. When I interviewed him a few years ago, we had lunch together - somewhat ironically, it seems to me now - at the restaurant at Tate Britain, a venue long since closed on account of the Rex Whistler mural on its walls (in 2020, the gallery's ethics committee called it unequivocally offensive"). What I remember most, though, isn't what happened there, but the fact that when we were finished, Rushdie insisted he would rather walk with me to Pimlico underground than pile into a taxi.

I think I was surprised. One of my very first jobs as a young journalist involved attending an event where Rushdie, then still in hiding, was rumoured to be going to appear (memory tells me that he did, emerging from behind a curtain like a stage magician). But I was also amused. He didn't - it was obvious - quite know the best way to the station and in his outsize puffer jacket he rather meekly followed me, looking about happily as he strolled. I've thought of those few stuccoed streets, and of him padding along them in the sunshine, seemingly without a care, every day since he was attacked. How the world turns. All the things, wonderful and ordinary, that we take for granted.

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