Hello, I'm Lauren Laverne and this is the Desert Island Discs podcast from BBC Radio 4.
Every week I ask my guests to choose the eight tracks, book and luxury,
that they'd want to take with them if they were cast away to a desert island.
For rights reasons,
the music's shorter than on the original broadcast but you can find a version with longer music tracks on BBC sounds.
Listeners will also get access to episodes 28 days earlier than everyone else.
I hope you enjoy listening.
My cast away this week is the author Sir Salman Rushdie.
His literary talent and his tenacity have earned him global success.
He's published more than 20 books and his many awards include a knighthood for services to literature and the Booker Prize,
which he won for his 1981 novel Midnight's Children.
It also topped the polls for the 25th and 40th anniversaries of the prize,
making it the most lauded novel in Booker history.
Like the book's hero, he was born in Bombay in 1947.
His stories are in the fabulous tradition of the Arabian night tales his father told him
while he was growing up.
It was in 1989, following the publication of his novel The Satanic Versus,
that his life took on the epic proportions of one of his stories.
Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, declared a fatwa,
an order to kill its author and anyone involved in its publication.