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Daily Inspiration Quote by Salman Rushdie

"Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts"

About this Quote

Rushdie is naming the dirty secret of storytelling: once a tale catches, it stops reporting the world and starts running it. “Legends make reality” flips the usual hierarchy. Facts are supposed to be bedrock; legends are supposed to be decorative. He’s pointing to the opposite dynamic in public life, where a compelling narrative can recruit believers, justify policies, and harden into “common sense” long after evidence objects.

The word “useful” is the tell. Rushdie isn’t praising myth as truer-than-true in some mystical way; he’s describing its practical power. Legends compress complexity into a portable script: heroes and villains, origins and destinies, a reason you can repeat at dinner or in a speech. That utility makes them sticky, and stickiness becomes authority. The subtext is political as much as literary: national founding myths, religious stories, revolutionary romances, even media narratives about crime or “decline” all create emotional permission for real-world actions. The legend doesn’t need to be accurate; it needs to be actionable.

Context matters with Rushdie. Writing out of postcolonial history, migration, and the culture wars around sacred stories, he understood how myth can be both shelter and weapon. His own life, shadowed by the consequences of contested narratives, underscores the line’s bite: stories are never just stories. They are infrastructure for identity, and infrastructure is what reality is built on. Facts can be disputed; legends organize the disputants.

Quote Details

TopicTruth
Source
Verified source: Midnight's Children (Salman Rushdie, 1981)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts. (Book One, "Hit-the-spittoon"; page 47 in commonly cited editions). This quote appears in Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children, which was first published in 1981. A searchable online text shows the line in context in the chapter sequence commonly identified as Book One, "Hit-the-spittoon." Multiple secondary references also cite it specifically to Midnight's Children, often giving page 47. I did not verify a scanned 1981 first-edition page image directly, so the exact first-edition page number should be treated as probable rather than fully confirmed; however, the original source work itself is clearly Midnight's Children. First publication details are supported by bibliographic records identifying the first publication as London: Jonathan Cape, 1981. ([salman-rushdie.freenovelread.com](https://salman-rushdie.freenovelread.com/page%2C7%2C35102-midnights_children))
Other candidates (1)
Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children (Reena Mitra, 2006) compilation95.0%
... Sometimes legends make reality and become more useful than the facts , " 25 says Rushdie's narrator in trying to ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Rushdie, Salman. (2026, March 10). Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sometimes-legends-make-reality-and-become-more-147961/

Chicago Style
Rushdie, Salman. "Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts." FixQuotes. March 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sometimes-legends-make-reality-and-become-more-147961/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Sometimes legends make reality, and become more useful than the facts." FixQuotes, 10 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/sometimes-legends-make-reality-and-become-more-147961/. Accessed 1 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

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Salman Rushdie (born June 19, 1947) is a Novelist from India.

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