Try GOLD - Free
"I Am Still Mad to Write"
The Atlantic
|March 2025
How a tragic accident helped Hanif Kureishi find his rebellious voice again
"That's what's great about being a writer," Hanif Kureishi told an interviewer a decade ago. "Every 10 years you become somebody else." He was 59 then, looking back on his younger days; in his 30s, he'd made his mark on a newly multicultural literary scene in London with the Oscar-nominated screenplay for My Beautiful Laundrette, followed by the prizewinning debut novel The Buddha of Suburbia. The son of an English mother and a Pakistani father, he was a bad boy in the spotlight, intimate with working-class locals and worldly elites, unabashed about smoking weed and sleeping around, and funny. He invoked P. G. Wodehouse and Philip Roth, and struck a chord with upstart young readers and writers (among them Zadie Smith). His boldly nonconformist voice was his own.
Then, at the age of 68, in December 2022, he became somebody unimaginably different after he keeled over onto a hard floor in Rome and came to consciousness a paraplegic. Trapped in a paralyzed body in a hospital bed, he tweeted two weeks later, via his son: "An insect, a hero, a ghost or Frankenstein's monster. Out of these mixings will come magnificent horrors and amazements. Every day when I dictate these thoughts, I open what is left of my broken body in order to try and reach you, to stop myself from dying inside." And suddenly, Kureishi was back in the spotlight. People around the world were listening. He kept dictating.
This story is from the March 2025 edition of The Atlantic.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The Eighth Deadly Sin
Humankind has devised a new form of debasement.
5 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
The Art of the (New) Deal
What the murals of the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building can teach us about patriotism, propaganda, and beauty
12 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
New Chairs
Collaboration, for Robert Rauschenberg and Merce Cunningham, began with the arrangement of chairs.
1 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
HISTORY IS RUNNING BACKWARDS
Why reactionaries are taking over the world
21 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
SOMEDAY IN TEHRAN
Like Donald Trump, I, too, once underestimated the Islamic Republic of Iran.
16 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
On Losing a Daughter
The people we were died at the exact moment our child did.
19 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
I Found It: The Best Free Restaurant Bread in America
Thirteen thousand miles. Infinite contenders. One beautiful loaf.
15 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
EVERYTHING IS FREE AND NOTHING MATTERS
What I saw at Jeff Bezos's Campfire retreat
9 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
Who Is Black Comedy For?
A new book is nostalgic for the '90s. But the era of crossover success was not necessarily the pinnacle of Black comedic achievement.
8 mins
May 2026
The Atlantic
The Feeling of Becoming Less and Less of a Person
In Ben Lerner's new novel, technology divides us further from one another, and ourselves.
9 mins
May 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

