"I did not go to Nicaragua intending to write a book, or, indeed, to
write at all: but my encounter with the place affected me so deeply that
in the end I had no choice." So notes Salman Rushdie in his first work
of nonfiction, a book as imaginative and meaningful as his acclaimed
novels. In The Jaguar Smile, Rushdie paints a brilliantly sharp and
haunting portrait of the people, the politics, the terrain, and the
poetry of "a country in which the ancient, opposing forces of creation
and destruction were in violent collision." Recounting his travels there
in 1986, in the midst of America's behind-the-scenes war against the
Sandinistas, Rushdie reveals a nation resounding to the clashes between
government and individuals, history and morality.