Despite the relative antiquity of the theme dealing with the fabulous rise and vicissitudes of the Vijayanagar Empire culminating in its dramatic obliteration, Salman Rushdie’s Victory City is a contemporary and political work. Literature and politics mostly share an uneasy relationship. Sthendhal reminds us in The Charterhouse of Parma that “politics in a literary work is like a pistol-shot in the middle of a concert, a crude affair though one impossible to ignore. We are about to speak of very ugly matters.” Most of the themes referred to and deliberated upon in the book have been widely discussed by Rushdie in his other works and most comprehensively in Joseph Anton—a definitive account of his besieged and beleaguered days. As Rushdie reminds us in Victory City yet again, “Human intelligence and human stupidity, as well as human nature, the best and worst of it, are the great constants in the changing world.”