Victory City, with its supernatural heroine, its city that blooms from seeds, its eras that turn from golden to ashen, its kings, bigots, and foreign visitors, is an epic, or an epic reconfigured for a modern age. Bisnaga teems with an urbane crowd; characters from history are altered to suit the course of this tale; fact and myth collide to create pleasing confusions. For instance, the stammering Portuguese visitor Domingo Nunes, (one of Pampa Kampana’s many lovers) could be Domingo Paes, who did actually visit the Vijayanagara Empire. But he arrived in the 16th century, while Mr Rushdie’s epic (or is it Pampa Kampana’s?) is set in the 14th century. But then, Victory City isn’t a history textbook. It is the inexact story of an empire; so made-up, so real.
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