Ever since the publication of the “big baggy monster”—as the author himself prefers to call it—that is ‘Midnight’s Children’, Salman Rushdie burst forth on the scene, with an international renown that was only to surge with time. And now, with his birthday round the corner on June 19, it feels apt to revisit the vast, layered worlds he has created. Rushdie's works brim with a transnational dynamism and speak of streets of Chennai with just as much intimacy as they do of the streets of Manhattan. With postcolonial themes to cosmopolitan narratives, his works amount to the perfect bandobast for a familiarisation with numerous places. From the bazaars of Bombay to the shikaras of Srinagar, today we delve into the literary trail of the author and find out the top spots that might form a Rushdie itinerary. Here is a journey into the landscapes Rushdie created, from the heart of India’s independence to mythical empires and dystopian Americas.








