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On Beauty A Novel
 
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On Beauty A Novel [Hardcover]

Zadie Smith
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
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Books in Canada

London's literary world-and so by extension Britain and Ireland's, for better or worse-is currently in the grip of a tussle over the role (or purpose) of poetry. This is not new, as each literary period offers a Dryden or Eliot to steer the course, away or towards certain styles, certain prescribed limits for figurative language. In late November this year, George Szirtes took the stage for the annual T.S. Eliot lecture, intending to defend poetry as a potentially democratic open space, relevant to all, from the likes of Don Paterson, who, so it is said, would rather poetry were kept professional (that is, expertly crafted) and reserved for the best. This might seem an odd beginning for a review of two new prestigious novels, if it weren't for the fact that the way the literary establishment, in general, views poetry and prose is very much at the heart of how these books have been received, and why they should (or should not) be read.
The Man Booker Prize is famous. Canadians, even, have won it, and, after decades of being up there with the Nobel and a handful of other international awards for writing, it has assumed an unquestionable status. So it is that novels shortlisted for the "Booker" (as it is lovingly called; "Man" should ask for their money back) always, these days, receive special notice. The Sea and On Beauty were not precisely head-to-head competitors this year, if only because it was brightly assumed that Banville's book was not in serious contention. Indeed, The Sea won by the slimmest of margins, with the head of the jury casting the deciding vote to break a tie. Immediately there was disharmony and uproar, and it was widely put about that Banville's prose was "too poetic", "complex" and "difficult"-but, unlike the other books, it had something Joycean in it that would make it "last".
I wish to stop here a moment to observe that a sad day is dawning when, having essentially moved away from any authentic engagement with poetry qua poetry in their intellectual lives, critics and pundits from that most literary of places, London, now generally recoil from having any of it (poetry that is) creep in to their fiction. This is borderline idiocy, and a sure sign of the decline of literate British society, which is a victim of an interminable media-orouboros, swallowing its own self-reflecting tail far too often.
The truth is that prose also partakes of poetic language, and that the finest prose stylists employ symbol, rhythm, simile, personification, and almost every other rhetorical device in the book. However, the truly "literary novel"-in short, the novel that knows as much about poetry's traditions as fiction's-is less welcome each month, perhaps because it eludes the marketer's canny grasp, and furrows the brows of those who prefer J.K. to T.S. Books lucidly written with "gripping stories" are still the ones that publishers and the public mainly seem to want, as prototypes for scripts Hollywood will eventually transubstantiate into that curious admixture of dross, sweat and filthy lucre that is the average screen adaptation.
Having read both The Sea and On Beauty, I am presented with what all reviewers dream of, the clear dichotomy. These books are not simply worlds apart, in terms of theme, tone, emphasis; they actually offer utterly different ways of thinking about how the world should be engaged with, morally and aesthetically, in language. This is perhaps the single most important element of writing-and precisely why polite men and women still get up on stages to argue for what the limits of poetic language should be.
Don't get me wrong. Zadie Smith is a talented, witty writer, and her book is rather amiable; indeed, it fairly glows with a sort of humane appreciation for people, places and things. Her imagination, like some latter-day Crusoe, is forever up to the task of finding just the apt phrase for describing an academic's fat wife, nimble shoulder blades, Mozart's Requiem, or a mottled green-glass window. She tosses in aphorisms with the vim of Oscar Wilde, and they often hit home. For example: "each couple is its own vaudeville act".
She is good at plot and characterization, and, as has been said elsewhere, the book's loving homage to E.M. Forster represents something of a happy milestone for the mainstream novel in Britain. But, dear me, is it dull. Not dull in the conventional sense, since the book is engaging, but in the sense, hinted at above, and to be teased out below: dull because, unlike Banville, the language does not dive into the deep end of either the human condition, or the full seriousness (however aesthetically playful) of what is at stake when writing is essayed. To make myself plainer here, On Beauty, with all its coy references to the author's husband and his (lacklustre) poetry, its cod-erudite involvement with the world of art history (she is no E.H. Gombrich, yet), and engagement with American university life, is about as genuine as a revival meeting in some prairie town circa 1932. The enthusiasm, energy and will to be wonderful are all in place, but the ultimate result is as deep as a magazine article on a war zone written by a celebrity.
Arguably, what is most grating is its time-out quality, the breezy whirlwind attempts to do a 21st century de Tocqueville in a sound-byte. Brits are famously torn in their appreciation and condemnation of the American sublime (they won't let Roth compete in the Booker because they think he'd always win). They are forever jetting to New York to find something gritty and big to write about, something with real weather and religion in it, and bingo, this is Zadie's version. You want to say, as Eliot in Waste Land, "She does the Yanks in different voices".
Smith is tremendously famous and respected for her age (she is in her early 30s), and bears some sort of resemblance to her generation in Britain, as F. Scott Fitzgerald did to his in America. The precise difference is that no one recognized it then. Not only was Fitzgerald the glitteringly brilliant chronicler of the superficial aspects of his moment, he was a stylistic genius, and, as if that wasn't enough, a tragic visionary. Smith is, no less than Banville, interested in style. She is a satirist as well-or, at the least, a hugely successful humorist, with laugh-out-loud set pieces calibrated expertly. However, she is not willing to allow either her style or her satire to bare its fangs to the degree needed to exceed the average reader's speed limit (to yoke a few images violently together). She doesn't have an expert, luscious command of language at this stage of her career, and too often her stock phrases, her constructions, verge on the sort of first-thing-to-hand flatness one sees in every novice's creative writing portfolio.
How else to explain "she stood like a zombie", or "her lips pulling away from her rosy gums to reveal her expensive American teeth"? The title of White Teeth, Smith's breakthrough debut notwithstanding (cheeky postmodernism perhaps), it is a lazy observation, and the zombie trope is sub-sub-Buffy. When Smith tries to catch the hyper-hip argot that is so-last-minute America, always just-fled, on the fly, Google-made, TV-led, water-cooler-now, she falls face forward, fighting with her countervailing Oxbridge tendency to pull back when all should be zip and flow.
Damning with faint praise though this may be, On Beauty is nevertheless that coveted thing, "a good read". It resists the thoroughly demonic possibilities of the greatest books in favour of being merely well-received, much-liked, and soon, no doubt, oft-imitated. On the other hand, The Sea is a misanthropic work of genius, and takes its place, consciously, and at times infuriatingly, in the elegant, eloquent pantheon of truly great masterworks of style of the modern period, often consciously referencing them in the process: The Great Gatsby, Black List: Section H, The Big Sleep, Lolita, Waiting For Godot, etc.
Todd Swift (Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Truly human, fully ourselves, beautiful," muses a character in Smith's third novel, an intrepid attempt to explore the sad stuff of adult life, 21st century–style: adultery, identity crises and emotional suffocation, interracial and intraracial global conflicts and religious zealotry. Like Smith's smash debut, White Teeth (2000), this work gathers narrative steam from the clash between two radically different families, with a plot that explicitly parallels Howards End. A failed romance between the evangelical son of the messy, liberal Belseys;Howard is Anglo-WASP and Kiki African-American;and the gorgeous daughter of the staid, conservative, Anglo-Caribbean Kipps leads to a soulful, transatlantic understanding between the families' matriarchs, Kiki and Carlene, even as their respective husbands, the art professors Howard and Monty, amass matériel for the culture wars at a fictional Massachusetts university. Meanwhile, Howard and Kiki must deal with Howard's extramarital affair, as their other son, Levi, moves from religion to politics. Everyone theorizes about art, and everyone searches for connections, sexual and otherwise. A very simple but very funny joke;that Howard, a Rembrandt scholar, hates Rembrandt;allows Smith to discourse majestically on some of the master's finest paintings. The articulate portrait of daughter Zora depicts the struggle to incorporate intellectual values into action. The elaborate Forster homage, as well as a too-neat alignment between characters, concerns and foils, threaten Smith's insightful probing of what makes life complicated (and beautiful), but those insights eventually add up. "There is such a shelter in each other," Carlene tells Kiki; it's a take on Forster's "Only Connect;," but one that finds new substance here.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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 (4)
4 star:
 (2)
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply . . . beautiful, May 22 2006
This review is from: On Beauty A Novel (Hardcover)
I decided to buy this book (and one other) based on a New York Times Review-the reviews rarely let me down, and ON BEAUTY along with McCrae's KATZENJAMMER proved me right once again as both books are excellent. Now. I do have an issue with some of the other reviews that complain about the author's use of slang. I thought it was pitch-perfect and fit right in. Also, she seems to really know what's in the hearts of her characters and for this she should be commended. No one-dimensional people here, folks. Her descriptions are excellent, as is the plot. Must also very highly recommend that you try KATZENJAMMER by Jackson McCrae for an equally good read. Also would recommend the author's WHITE TEETH.
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The 3rd, easy novel - brilliant!, Sep 20 2005
By 
Mr. K. Mahoney "Kevin Mahoney" (Punked Books, London, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: On Beauty A Novel (Hardcover)
"On Beauty" is Zadie Smith's glorious third novel. Howard Belsey is having a difficult time. He is still in the doghouse after a one-night stand. Then he learns that his academic adversary, Monty Kipps, is joining the staff at Wellington, the Bostonian university at which Howard teaches (which seems to be based on the Harvard Zadie Smith knew as a Radcliffe fellow). Howard, whose unfinished magnum opus is entitled "Against Rembrandt: Interrogating a Master", ironically casts Monty as an iconoclast: although Monty's targets are political, rather than artistic. It is Howard who is the direct opposite of a Simon Schama or a Harold Bloom. Howard and his liberal colleagues fear that the conservative Monty will argue against Affirmative Action and the unqualified discretionaries that they allow on their courses. It doesn't help that Howard's son, Jerome, has previously engaged in a brief connection with Victoria, Monty Kipps' exceedingly beautiful daughter. Howard's daughter Zora (whom Zadie Smith has named after literary heroine Zora Neale Hurston) jealously regards Victoria as a vacuous beauty. However, not all of the Belseys' are at war against the Kipps': Kiki, Howard's wife, finds a common shelter with Carlene, Monty's friendly but sometimes distant wife. Meanwhile, Levi, the other Belsey child, embarks on a quest to assert his black identity, and falls in with a crowd of deprived Haitian immigrants. Along the way, they encounter Carl Thomas, a young black poet with conscious hip-hop lyrics, who strives to make something better of himself.

Carl is the Leonard Bast, Carlene is Ruth Wilcox, and Kiki is Margaret Schlegel, in Zadie Smith's reworking of E. M. Forster's "Howards End". In this, Zadie Smith seems to be taking her cue from Elaine Scarry's essay, "On Beauty and Being Just" (which Zadie does acknowledge to be one inspiration for the title of this novel). Scarry's thesis starts out with the observation that Beauty leads to replication - the artist sees a beautiful bird, which leads artist to paint the beautiful bird beautifully. Thus does Zadie Smith embark on a seemingly perilous voyage to reproduce a book she loves. It would appear that it's okay for a beautiful boy band to reproduce the millionth version of "Unchained Melody", because we don't expect much of the poor darlings: it is not okay for a respected literary novelist to do the same, because we expect so much more from them. That, at least, is the initial perception. But if one thinks of the origins of storytelling - bard on rock embellishing the already fantastic tales of his predecessors - then what Zadie Smith is attempting to do here does not seem so strange. However, it just seems more acceptable nowadays for the oral culture (boy bands) to do it, rather than the set-in-stone literary culture. At times though, it does seem as though Smith is following E. M. Forster's line too far - the aborted rail trip to Amherst reads uncomfortably due to this - Carlene's terminal spontaneity could have been revealed in a more original way. Yet, the final analysis must be that she uses her source material very intelligently and subtly. Although Zadie Smith seems to regard Roland Barthes as being very dry (no doubt due to the utility of his prose), "On Beauty" could be seen in some ways as indicative of "The Birth of the Reader", with the reader going so far as to create their own version of the text (although I prefer to see the relationship between author and reader as a dialogue, which is a whole lot less dramatic than this birthing and dying and circle of life kind of thing). For instance, Leonard Bast pursued Beauty in "Howards End" through books and impromptu midnight walks. Although "On Beauty" is in some ways a love letter to "Howards End", in its wit and vitality, the love goes both ways, resulting in a novel that is very much Zadie Smith's own. On a mundane level, there are scenes set in Zadie's homeland, Willesden, just like "White Teeth". On a more sublime level, Zadie Smith's voice in this novel seems liberated, exuberant, and confident: she is a novelist who is in full command of her literary powers. "On Beauty" is very much her book, full of her character, her twists and turns, rather than E. M. Forster's. To paraphrase a popular film of the 70s, it's she who is the master now.

There is another more practical reason for Zadie Smith's employment of "Howard's End", other than her love for the novel. Current day America is analogous with Great Britain at the end of the Victorian era. Zadie Smith does know that there are many Leonard Basts out there in America: in pursuit of beauty, but angry and resentful because they have been deprived of it, or because it has been literally robbed from them. Just as the liberal women debate how to save the Leonard Basts of this world from their fate in "Howards End", so too do Howard and his liberal colleagues battle to save the discretionaries. Can Beauty ever be reached in an inherently unjust society? Zadie Smith has produced a very timely novel, as the truth in her novel has been made self-evident by the ugly catastrophe of Katrina.

It would also be a pleasing irony if a Great American Novel, (as "On Beauty" is), were to win the Man Booker Prize. Zadie Smith should walk off with the prize in my view, because this outstanding novel deserves nothing less.

I have created a comprehensive reading guide for "On Beauty" on the internet - interested readers can contact me for the hyperlink.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars I can't believe people think this book is good, Aug 8 2007
By 
Slick (Denver, CO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: On Beauty (Paperback)
443 pages and the characters are no more deeply drawn than sketches of stereotypes. I was never able to see the characters in my mind's eye. Smith makes the greenest student writer's mistake of telling, not showing. Furthermore, contrary to what reviews trumpet, this book offers no insight whatsoever into either "liberal" or "conservative" mindsets. I understand that so many people think Smith is a good writer, but I just don't get it. Really, I don't. I thought White Teeth was just o.k., for a first novel. But On Beauty does not show improvement -- it shows that Smith was once writing fairly well about what she intimately knows, and now unsuccessfully strains to cover territory that she has only a passing familiarity with.
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