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78 pages 2 hours read

Haroun and the Sea of Stories

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 1990

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Essay Topics

1.

In the context of the story, how can free speech become a dangerous thing?

2.

How does the author’s experience with the fatwa inform the story of Haroun?

3.

Why does Khattam-Shud forbid speech in the kingdom of Chup? What does this represent in the broader themes about the importance of stories?

4.

After Haroun returns from Kahani, the author writes, “Time is definitely on the move again around these parts” (211). What does the author mean by this statement?

5.

What is the role of Haroun’s mother in the story? Compare Haroun’s mother to the other prominent female character, Blabbermouth.

6.

What role does language play in the novel? Think of an example where Rushdie seems to be breaking the fourth wall and speaking directly to the reader through his use of wordplay. What tone does this give the novel?

7.

Author Salman Rushdie wrote Haroun as the follow-up to his novel, The Satanic Verses, a novel that earned him a death sentence from the Ayatollah and forced Rushdie into hiding. How does Haroun address issues of free speech and censorship?

8.

Why does Rashid have two nicknames? What does this say about different perspectives around the same story?

9.

Why is Haroun briefly unsatisfied with the happy ending his city receives from the Walrus? What seems to be Rushdie’s message here?

10.

Why does Khattam-Shud wish to stop the flow of stories? Since Khattam-Shud represents a story’s end (his name literally means “The End”) is he essential to the function of a story as well? How might this play into the Walrus’s assertion that true happy endings only come at the end of a story? Discuss.

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