How Edith Bunker's Shocking Death in "All in the Family" Spinoff Highlighted Archie Bunker in a New Way Angela AndaloroNovember 2, 2025 at 8:30 PM 0 CBS via Getty; The Norman Lear Effect Jean Stapleton as Edith Bunker (left), Carroll O'Connor as Archie Bunker Archie Bunker was known for being grouchy and cold, but certain moments illuminated the character's humanity Seeing Archie deal with the death of his wife, Edith Bunker, in the All in the Family spinoff, Archie Bunker's Place, changed how some fans perceived the character In real life, actress Jean Stapleton was ready to move on from her ...

- - How Edith Bunker's Shocking Death in "All in the Family" Spinoff Highlighted Archie Bunker in a New Way

Angela AndaloroNovember 2, 2025 at 8:30 PM

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CBS via Getty; The Norman Lear Effect

Jean Stapleton as Edith Bunker (left), Carroll O'Connor as Archie Bunker -

Archie Bunker was known for being grouchy and cold, but certain moments illuminated the character's humanity

Seeing Archie deal with the death of his wife, Edith Bunker, in the All in the Family spinoff, Archie Bunker's Place, changed how some fans perceived the character

In real life, actress Jean Stapleton was ready to move on from her time as Edith

One of TV's most beloved marriages had a heartbreaking conclusion.

Fans of All in the Family may remember leaving off on an emotional note with the Bunker family. As Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) planned to celebrate St. Patrick's Day at his bar, Archie's Place, he convinced his wife, Edith Bunker (Jean Stapleton), to cook a traditional holiday feast of corned beef and cabbage. She agreed, failing to tell Archie she was sick with phlebitis and told to stay off her feet, and worked until she physically could no longer.

Archie found out and called Edith's doctor, who accused him of knowingly making her work while sick. The moment served as a realization that, for all his faults, Archie had no desire to knowingly hurt his wife.

The series finale, which aired April 8, 1979, concluded with a heartfelt conversation between Archie and Edith, where he admitted what she truly meant to him.

CBS via Getty

Jean Stapleton and Carroll O'Connor chat over a scene with Normal Lear as Sally Struther and Rob Reiner chat in the background

Off the screen, All in the Family was coming to an end primarily because of showrunner Norman Lear and Stapleton's desire to move on from the project. CBS decided to end All in the Family after nine seasons and pick up with Archie on his own show, Archie Bunker's Place.

Stapleton still appeared in five episodes during the spinoff's first season, leading fans to believe she'd have a place in the series, which focused on Archie's bar. In reality, she was making guest appearances before a heartwrenching two-part episode that kicked off season 2, where her character unexpectedly died, which aired on Nov. 2, 1980.

Edith's goodbye presented another parallel between the All in the Family universe and Till Death Us Do Part, the British series upon which Lear based All in the Family. It was on its spinoff, In Sickness and In Health, that their own version of Edith, Else Garnett, had also died. The character was written out after actress Dandy Nichols' death.

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Though Edith's death occurred off camera, season 2 picked up with Archie still in the thick of mourning, denying his grief. Audiences learn that Edith had died of a stroke a month earlier. From blowing off an insurance representative who tried to bring him a check as the beneficiary of her life insurance to ignoring her things around the house, it all built up to an emotional moment that gave audiences a true look at the core of the sitcom character.

The particularly poignant moment came when Archie entered his bedroom after relatives had cleared out Edith's things to donate to charity. He closed a drawer in the bare room and then sat on the bed, where he spotted a single pink slipper out of the corner of his eye.

The known grouch bent down and picked up the slipper, then started to talk to Edith. "It wasn't supposed to be like this, you know. I was supposed to be the first one to go."

"I know I always used to kid ya, about you going first. But you know I never meant none of that. And that morning, when you was laying there, I was shaking you and yelling at you to go down and fix my breakfast. I didn't know."

"You had no right to leave me that way, Edith, without giving me just one more chance to say 'I love you,'" he said, collapsing into sobs.

It's then that Stephanie, the couple's niece, who they'd taken in, appeared in the doorway. Archie noticed her standing there and told her, "She was the one who was supposed to stay down here with you, you know. Not me, 'cause I ain't no good at none of this."

In a December 1981 interview with The Christian Science Monitor, Stapleton recalled discussing her character's end with the cast of All in the Family ahead of the final season, at which point she'd felt like she had fulfilled everything she wanted to with the character.

"The death of Edith was discussed at length by the cast of All in the Family. It was necessary because it would have been dishonest for her to get a divorce — the Bunkers would never divorce each other," she explained. "If we sent her off for a long visit to California, she would still be hovering over the series, making it difficult to enlarge and expand Archie's life."

"The last person to agree to that was Norman Lear," the actress added. "She meant so much to him. I remember talking to Norman on the phone, and I said, 'Norman, she's only fiction.' And there was dead silence. I thought, 'I've said the wrong thing. I have hurt Norman Lear, the last thing I would ever want to do.' After a long pause, he said: 'To me, she isn't only fiction.' "

The two found a happy place for Edith's legacy, getting CBS to make a $500,000 donation to the National Organization for Women to start the Edith Bunker Memorial Fund in her honor.

CBS via Getty

Jean Stapleton (as Edith Bunker) and Carroll O'Connor (as Archie Bunker) in "All In the Family"

''I am very proud of the way the whole problem turned out. But personally, I realized it was a darn good thing for it to be that way because, somehow, the public cannot separate me from the character of Edith. If she is gone, it helps me personally in their minds because they know I am somebody else now.''

Stapleton concluded, "That was a marvelous part of my career. I wouldn't trade one minute of it. It took me so far in so many ways. But I have no regrets about it ending as it did. It was getting to be a chore. An artist doesn't paint the same canvas for his entire career, an actor doesn't play the same part."

In a tribute Lear penned to Stapleton in The Hollywood Reporter after she died in 2013, he wrote about the memorial fund, a tribute to both the character and the actress as forces in feminism.

"They raised, I don't know how much more, using Edith as the centerpiece of the campaign. Even in death, Edith and Jean had magic."

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How Edith Bunker's Shocking Death in “All in the Family” Spinoff Highlighted Archie Bunker in a New Way

How Edith Bunker 's Shocking Death in "All in the Family" Spinoff Highlighted Archie Bunker in a New Way...

Will There Be a "Selling Sunset" Season 10? What We Know So Far About the Series' Return Christopher RudolphNovember 2, 2025 at 8:30 PM 0 Courtesy of Netflix Chrishell Stause, Emma Hernan and Chelsea Lazkani in 'Selling Sunset' Selling Sunset season 9 debuted on Oct. 29 on Netflix The reality show features the Oppenheim Group's real estate agents, including Mary Bonnet and Chrishell Stause Netflix has not officially renewed Selling Sunset for season 10, and the cast has weighed in on whether it should continue Selling Sunset might not be quite done showing off listings and serving up the drama...

- - Will There Be a "Selling Sunset" Season 10? What We Know So Far About the Series' Return

Christopher RudolphNovember 2, 2025 at 8:30 PM

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Courtesy of Netflix

Chrishell Stause, Emma Hernan and Chelsea Lazkani in 'Selling Sunset' -

Selling Sunset season 9 debuted on Oct. 29 on Netflix

The reality show features the Oppenheim Group's real estate agents, including Mary Bonnet and Chrishell Stause

Netflix has not officially renewed Selling Sunset for season 10, and the cast has weighed in on whether it should continue

Selling Sunset might not be quite done showing off listings and serving up the drama — though it's still up in the air.

Since its 2019 debut, the Netflix reality show has followed the Oppenheim Group's real estate agents as they work on exclusive leads, give tours of luxurious homes and ring the bell after a major sale.

Throughout its run, the series has featured several different faces, including Mary Bonnet, Chrishell Stause, Amanza Smith, Nicole Young, Emma Hernan, Chelsea Lazkani, Bre Tiesi and Alanna Gold. More recently, Sandra Vergara was added to the roster for season 9, which premiered on Oct. 29.

While working on impressive listings throughout the Los Angeles area, the real estate agents have also had to navigate personal dynamics with one another, including some that have gotten tense in front of the cameras. That said, Jason and Brett Oppenheim have been there to help keep selling goals top of mind.

Seasons of Selling Sunset tend to go down quicker than an Erehwon smoothie, so fans who have already finished season 9 might be wondering if the O Group will be back.

So, will there be a Selling Sunset season 10? Here's what to know about the Netflix reality show's next chapter.

Warning: Spoilers ahead for Selling Sunset season 9!

Will there be a season 10 of Selling Sunset?

Courtesy of Netflix

Jason Oppenheim and Brett Oppenheim in 'Selling Sunset'

Netflix has not officially announced the renewal of Selling Sunset season 10.

In November 2023, Jason revealed that the series had been greenlit for season 8. The following fall, in November 2024, it was confirmed that Selling Sunset season 9 was filming.

"For me, each season gets more and more fun," Jason told The Hollywood Reporter in November 2023. "When we were doing season one, we were like, 'If we can get to season three, we had a real show. Anything above that would be icing.' We've been running on icing for years now."

What has the Selling Sunset cast said about a season 10?

Courtesy of Netflix

Nicole Young in 'Selling Sunset'

The future of Selling Sunset is unclear, but that hasn't stopped some of the cast from dishing about a potential tenth season — and if they would return for it.

"Now, this is nothing official," Nicole Young told TooFab in October 2025. "We might be past the point of no return. ... I kind of think the show has run its course."

"I think at certain times, it's gotten a bit dark," she continued. "You need to have those positive, fun, lighthearted moments as well. It needs to balance. When it [the show] seems like it's just all dark, that's kind of when I think we need to wrap it up, you know? And I think we're at that point at this."

Young is in the process of moving to Tennessee, as she revealed to Tudum in October 2025. When asked about returning for season 10, she said, "My new priority will be Nashville, but it definitely won't be goodbye to L.A. real estate."

Another cast member, Mary Bonnet, was more optimistic about Selling Sunset coming back for a tenth round.

"I think that the season is very, very good and we're going to have good ratings," she told TooFab. "I believe that there will be a Season 10. There just might be some changes. It's my assumption. I don't know that for sure, but there might have to be some changes."

Who could return for Selling Sunset season 10?

Courtesy of Netflix

Bre Tiesi, Chrishell Stause and Alanna Whittaker in 'Selling Sunset'

An official cast announcement hasn't been made for a possible season 10, but Bonnet, Stause, Smith, Young, Hernan, Lazkani, Tiesi and Gold all returned for season 9.

Jason and Brett, the twin brothers behind the Oppenheim Group, were also back. Season 9 added a new face as well: Vergara. Original cast member Heather Rae El Moussa, who left the series in season 7, briefly returned for a cameo in the new season.

One cast member whose Selling Sunset future is uncertain is Young, who was "fired" during season 9, after she made a "disheartening" comment about Stause's late parents.

In an interview with Tudum, Young said, "That storyline was frustrating for me, because the truth of the matter is I was never fired from the office or The Oppenheim group."

Netflix noted that the realtors are independent contractors.

"Not coming into the office and continuing to work and do business, that wasn't a huge deal," she added.

Where can I watch Selling Sunset?

Courtesy of Netflix

Emma Hernan and Chrishell Stause in "Selling Sunset"

All nine seasons of Selling Sunset are available to stream on Netflix.

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Will There Be a “Selling Sunset” Season 10? What We Know So Far About the Series' Return

Will There Be a "Selling Sunset" Season 10? What We Know So Far About the Series' Return Christopher Rudo...
New Photo - 'Wicked' Star, 38, Draws Eyes With Unusual Outfit at Los Angeles Event

'Wicked' Star, 38, Draws Eyes With Unusual Outfit at Los Angeles Event Geca FloresNovember 2, 2025 at 7:30 PM 0 Cynthia Erivo literally had an alleyesonme moment as she stepped out for a starstudded event in Los Angeles. On Saturday night, the city lit up with Alist stars and Hollywood's finest as the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala unfolded in dazzling style. For this year's event, the LACMA Gala honored visual artist Mary Corse and Black Panther and Sinners director Ryan Coogler for their contributions to the industry.

- - 'Wicked' Star, 38, Draws Eyes With Unusual Outfit at Los Angeles Event

Geca FloresNovember 2, 2025 at 7:30 PM

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Cynthia Erivo literally had an all-eyes-on-me moment as she stepped out for a star-studded event in Los Angeles.

On Saturday night, the city lit up with A-list stars and Hollywood's finest as the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala unfolded in dazzling style.

For this year's event, the LACMA Gala honored visual artist Mary Corse and Black Panther and Sinners director Ryan Coogler for their contributions to the industry.

Meanwhile, among those who delivered a show-stopping entrance was the Wicked star, who stunned attendees with a jaw-dropping ensemble.

Erivo's outfit was from Schiaparelli's Fall/Winter 2025 collection. Designed by Creative Director Daniel Roseberry, the dress showcased a fully beaded strapless gown adorned with sculptural eyes, a signature of the Parisian haute couture house.

Moreover, the look featured a winged accent in a sheer train, which added a dramatic touch to her red-carpet appearance.

Lastly, her stylist Jason Bolden completed the outfit with David Yurman earrings and sparkly Christian Louboutin heels.

Cynthia Erivo stuns at the 2025 LACMA Art+Film Gala pic.twitter.com/sMO9Ow1Wja

— Variety (@Variety) November 2, 2025

The Oscar-nominated star delivered a look that was both hauntingly beautiful and irresistibly bold, sparking buzz across social media.

"Absolutely gorgeous," a fan commented in a post shared by Variety.

"She looks so good," a different user echoed.

The same goes for another who said "she's so gorg."

Meanwhile, some poked fun at Erivo's unusual outfit, noting "It always feels like / somebody's watching me."

"Not the trypophobia dress," another chimed in.

In 2024, the 38-year-old actress and Ariana Grande took the world by storm as they led the hit movie Wicked.

Taking on the iconic role of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, she received multiple nods from major award-giving bodies for her outstanding portrayal.

For one, she was nominated for an Oscar for Best Actress.

Despite not taking home the title after losing to Mikey Madison for her role in Anora, the actress still felt grateful to be considered for such recognition.

"It's fine," she jokingly said, as mentioned by Deadline while en route to the Sundance Film Festival. "I've got happy tears. I don't know how to tackle this. The whole thing is madness and amazing. This is the most wonderful thing to have gone through and to experience. I'm just really pleased, it's so cool."

Beyond the award nominations and the buzz surrounding her performance, Erivo also formed a genuine friendship with Grande.

In fact, the duo even got matching tattoos to honor the upcoming sequel Wicked: For Good.

Related: Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande Join Other 'Wicked' Castmates in NBC Special 'Wicked: One Wonderful Night'

This story was originally reported by Parade on Nov 2, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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'Wicked' Star, 38, Draws Eyes With Unusual Outfit at Los Angeles Event

'Wicked' Star, 38, Draws Eyes With Unusual Outfit at Los Angeles Event Geca FloresNovember 2, 2025 at 7:30 PM 0...
New Photo - Transcript: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on

Transcript: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Nov. 2, 2025 CBSNewsNovember 2, 2025 at 10:19 PM 0 Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images The following is the transcript of the interview with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Nov. 2, 2025. MARGARET BRENNAN: We go now to the Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy, who joins us this morning from Far Hills, New Jersey. Welcome to Face The Nation. TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY SEAN DUFFY: Hey, thanks, Margaret, good to be with you.

- - Transcript: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Nov. 2, 2025

CBSNewsNovember 2, 2025 at 10:19 PM

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Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The following is the transcript of the interview with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Nov. 2, 2025.

MARGARET BRENNAN: We go now to the Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy, who joins us this morning from Far Hills, New Jersey. Welcome to Face The Nation.

TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY SEAN DUFFY: Hey, thanks, Margaret, good to be with you.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So our CBS polling shows that there is real concern among Americans regarding the effect of the shutdown on all transportation. Should Americans also have safety concerns at this point?

SEC. DUFFY: I think that's a great question. We work overtime to make sure the system is safe. And we will slow traffic down, you'll see delays, we'll have flights canceled to make sure the system is safe. But we have to be honest, when we have controllers, where we have shortages and towers and TRACONs doing two jobs, does it add more risk into the system? Sure, it does. But again, we're always managing that. Again, we don't- we don't want crashes, we want people to go safely, and so we will slow and stop traffic if we don't think we can manage it in a way that keeps people safe as they go from point A to point B.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, I did see that the FAA said, up in New York, 80% of air traffic controllers were absent from New York area airports, and that same day, there was a near miss at LaGuardia Airport. One United plane clipped another one. Was that pilot error? Or was that linked to some kind of shortage?

SEC. DUFFY: Well, you mentioned the shortages of air traffic controllers in the New York airspace. We had a couple days ago, three hour delays throughout New York. And again, I haven't got the readout yet on whether that was pilot error. And usually, when these planes are- are traveling very close to each other, it's their job to stay away from one another. That's not controllers, it's usually pilot error. But again, I'll have to look and see what directive was given by the air traffic controllers. But it's normally the pilot's responsibility to stay away from aircraft on the tarmac.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So if this shutdown continues, how- when does it become an emergency in terms of passenger safety and the safety of those who are trying to, for example, get home for Thanksgiving in a few weeks.

SEC. DUFFY: Well, does it become a flight emergency, a safety issue? No, we will stop traffic. So we're not going to let that happen. I think the real consequence is, what kind of rolling delays do you have throughout the system, right? We've seen problems at LA, in Dallas, in DC, Boston, Atlanta. And so I think it's only going to get worse. We have controllers who, some of them are new controllers. We have trainee controllers who are very helpful in the tower. They don't make a lot of money, and they're now confronted, they haven't had a paycheck for over a month. They're confronted with a decision: do I put food on my kids' table, do I put gas in the car, do I pay my rent or do I go to work and not get paid? They're making decisions. I've encouraged them all to come to work. I want them to come to work, but they're making life decisions that they shouldn't have to make. Let's open the government up. Let's pay these people, these young controllers. Margaret, it's really important, I think you've covered this, we don't have the best equipment in our towers and centers for air traffic control. But we have the safest airspace, we have the most efficient airspace because we have the best controllers in the world that work our skies and keep our people safe. They deserve a paycheck.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, given that they are so essential, is there any way the administration can find a pot of money like seems to be getting found for others, like the military, to pay controllers so they can show up to work? Why isn't the administration able to do that?

SEC. DUFFY: Yeah, well, I think that's a great question. So we have done all we can. President Trump has done all he can to minimize the pain of the shutdown on the American people. Again, you remember under Barack Obama's shutdown, he was trying to gate off open air monuments in Washington, DC, and were shutting down parks just walking paths. President Trump has tried to make it less painful on the American people. So we're looking for pots of money to pay essential workers, but there's really strict rules around what money we can use and how we can use it, and we have to follow the law. And so we were able to fund a central air service, service to more rural communities. We've kept our academy up and running thus far. We don't have a ton of time, a couple more weeks of that funding. But I don't have the resources to do that, and the simple answer is, vote to open the government, negotiate your differences. That's fine, that's fair. But again, these people should be paid. And to say that it's Donald Trump's fault, to say he has to find money, when Democrats have said there's no money for you because we've shut the government down, I mean, that's a contorted analysis. And Democrats are trying to do that, and I don't think it really works. Give the money and we'll pay the controllers.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yeah, well, I saw reports that air traffic controllers only received partial pay mid-October, and this past week they missed a paycheck altogether. So practically speaking, for those who are in these jobs, would you advise them to pick up part time work elsewhere?

SEC. DUFFY: No, I'm clearly asking them, come to work. It is your job to come to work, and eventually you will be paid. But as I've traveled around the country and talked to air traffic controllers, they've told me that a lot of them can navigate missing one paycheck. None of them can manage missing two paychecks. And they're like every American family, everyone watching your show today as they think about their own finances, how many paychecks can they miss before it becomes real stress, real strife in their life? And so they're- at the- next week, they're going to get a notice of what their next paycheck is going to be. And if the government doesn't open, the notice will be another big fat zero, and you're going to see more of them probably make the decisions of funding their families, putting food on their table, gas in their cars, versus coming into work. That's not what I want, but I'm a realist as well, Margaret, these are the decisions of life and survival that these controllers have to make. By the way, it's the technicians, also. We have old equipment. We have technicians that work in the towers that keep the equipment operational. They're not getting paid. I have train inspectors who are working to keep our trains running and running safely. They're working without pay. I have pipeline inspectors, same thing. Across the system. We have a number of people who are working without pay. We talk about the air traffic controllers, but I have thousands of employees who are showing up, doing the work and trying to keep this system safe for the American people all the while they don't get paid to do it.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Understood. So you said back on Fox Business on October 9 that "I can't have people not showing up for work and that they may be let go." There's a shortage of 4,000 controllers already. You're not firing people, are you? You can't afford to.

SEC. DUFFY: No, so when- we're 2-3,000 controllers short, but that's a huge number. And you make an interesting point, because I've tried to surge air traffic controllers into the system through our academy. Margaret, we're up 20% of controllers through the academy this year alone. It takes them about a year to two to get certified in a tower, but this shutdown is impacting my pipeline of controllers. And so as- when everyone forgets about air traffic control and the shutdown, I'm going to deal with the consequences of, again, delivering for the American people and getting more controllers in the towers, not less. And you bring up a good point. We're already stressed in that we don't have enough controllers in our system, and this shutdown, when we have staffing triggers where they're not coming in because they're funding their families and food on their tables, that makes it more difficult because we're already short long. Long term consequences--

MARGARET BRENNAN: So you're not going to fire them?

SEC. DUFFY: I don't plan on firing control. No, listen, I have, no, I- again when they're making decisions to feed their families, I'm not going to fire air traffic controllers. I have, I have loved them and supported them as they're trying to go through this process and it's challenging for them. They need support, they need money, they need a paycheck. They don't need to be fired.

MARGARET BRENNAN: All right. Secretary Duffy, thank you for your time this morning. We'll be right back.

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Transcript: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Nov. 2, 2025

Transcript: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Nov. 2, 2025 CBS...
New Photo - Book excerpt:

Book excerpt: "The Eleventh Hour" by Salman Rushdie CBSNews November 2, 2025 at 10:37 PM 0 / Credit: Random House We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article. "The Eleventh Hour: A Quintet of Stories" (to be published Tuesday by Random House) is acclaimed novelist Salman Rushie's elegiac new collection of stories – his first fiction since a 2022 attack that nearly killed him – in which he writes of intimate encounters with death, ghosts, magic, and the immutable passage of time.

- - Book excerpt: "The Eleventh Hour" by Salman Rushdie

CBSNews November 2, 2025 at 10:37 PM

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/ Credit: Random House

We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.

"The Eleventh Hour: A Quintet of Stories" (to be published Tuesday by Random House) is acclaimed novelist Salman Rushie's elegiac new collection of stories – his first fiction since a 2022 attack that nearly killed him – in which he writes of intimate encounters with death, ghosts, magic, and the immutable passage of time.

Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Martha Teichner's conversation with Salman Rushdie on "CBS Sunday Morning" November 2!

"The Eleventh Hour" by Salman Rushdie

Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.

From "In the South"

The day Junior fell down began like any other day: the explosion of heat rippling the air, the trumpeting sun­light, the traffic's tidal surges, the prayer chants in the distance, the cheap film music rising up from the floor below, the pelvic thrusts of an "item number" dancing across a neigh­bor's TV; a child's cry, a mother's rebuke, unexplained laughter, scarlet expectorations, bicycles, the newly plaited hair of school­girls, the smell of strong coffee, a green wing flashing in a tree. Senior and Junior, two very old men, opened their eyes in their bedrooms on the fourth floor of a sea-green building on a leafy lane, just out of sight of Elliot's Beach, where, that evening, the young would congregate, as they always did, to perform the rites of youth, not far from the village of the fisherfolk, who had no time for such frivolity. The poor were puritans by night and day. As for the old, they had rites of their own and did not need to wait for evening. With the sun stabbing at them through their window blinds, the two old men struggled to their feet and lurched out onto their adjacent verandas, emerging at the same moment, like characters in an ancient tale, trapped in fateful coincidences, unable to escape the consequences of chance.

Almost at once they began to speak. Their words were not new. These were ritual speeches, obeisances to the new day, of­fered in call-and-response format, like the rhythmic dialogues or "duels" of the virtuosi of Carnatic music during the annual December festival.

"Be thankful we are men of the south," said Junior, stretch­ing and yawning. "Southerners are we, in the south of our city in the south of our country in the south of our continent. God be praised. We are warm, slow, and sensual guys, not like the cold fishes of the north."

Senior, scratching first his belly and then the back of his neck, contradicted him at once. "In the first place," he said, "the south is a fiction, existing only because men have agreed to call it that. Suppose men had imagined the earth the other way up! We would be the northerners then. The universe does not under­stand up and down; neither does a dog. To a dog there is no north and south. And in the second place, you're not that warm a character, and a woman would laugh to hear you call yourself sensual—but you are slow, that is beyond a doubt."

This was how they were: they fought, going at each other like ancient wrestlers whose left feet were tied together at the ankles. The rope that bound them so tightly was their name. By a curious chance—which they had come to think of as "des­tiny," or, as they more often called it, a "curse"—they shared a name, a long name like so many names of the south, a name neither of them cared to speak. By banishing the name, by re­ducing it to its initial letter, V., they made the rope invisible, which did not mean it did not exist. They echoed each other in other ways—their voices were high, they were of similarly wiry build and medium height, they were both nearsighted, and, after lifetimes of priding themselves on the quality of their teeth, they had both surrendered to the humiliating inevitabil­ity of dentures—but it was the unused name, that symmetrical V., the Name That Could Not Be Spoken, that had joined them together for decades.

The two old men did not share a birthday, however. One was seventeen days older than the other. That must have been how "Senior" and "Junior" got started, even though the nicknames had been in use for so long that nobody could now remember who originally thought them up. V. Senior and Junior they had become, Junior V. and Senior V. forevermore, quarreling to the death. They were eighty-one years old. If old age was thought of as an evening, ending in midnight oblivion, they were well into the eleventh hour.

"You look terrible," Junior told Senior, as he did every morn­ing. "You look like a man who is only waiting to die."

Senior—nodding gravely, and also speaking in accordance with their private tradition—responded, "That is better than looking, as you do, like a man who is still waiting to live."

Excerpted from "The Eleventh Hour" by Salman Rushdie. Copyright © 2025 by Salman Rushdie. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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"The Eleventh Hour: A Quintet of Stories" by Salman Rushdie (Random House), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available Nov. 4 salmanrushdie.com (Official site)

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Published: November 02, 2025 at 05:00PM on Source: KOS MAG

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Book excerpt: "The Eleventh Hour" by Salman Rushdie

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