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The Year of Magical Thinking
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Freakonomics
Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life
My Friend Leonard
Oh the Glory of It All
Never Let Me Go
The History of Love
The Complete Calvin and Hobbes
The World Is Flat
A Man without a Country
The Tender Bar
No Country for Old Men
On Beauty
Encyclopedia Prehistorica Dinosaurs
The Glass Castle
Kafka on the Shore
Black Hole
1491 : New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus
Saturday
The Historian
Mao : The Unknown Story
1776
Animals in Translation
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
God's Politics
Lunar Park
Specimen Days
Teacher Man
Blink
Infrastructure
The Complete New Yorker
Veronica
Six Bad Things
The Areas of My Expertise
Hip Hotels Atlas
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
The March
China, Inc.
Saving Fish from Drowning
The Star Wars Poster Book
Looking At Los Angeles
When I Knew
Mother-Daughter Wisdom
Mother of Sorrows
The Design of Dissent
The Golden Spruce
Eleanor Rigby
Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You
The Algebraist
 
 
 
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View Larger Picture of On Beauty  by Zadie  Smith

On Beauty

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On Beauty
by Authors: Zadie Smith

Hardcover
Description: In an author's note at the end of On Beauty, Zadie Smith writes: "My largest structural debt should be obvious to any E.M. Forster fan; suffice it to say he gave me a classy old frame, which I covered with new material as best I could." If it is true that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Forster, perched on a cloud somewhere, should be all puffed up with pride. His disciple has taken Howards End, that marvelous tale of class difference, and upped the ante by adding race, politics, and gender. The end result is a story for the 21st century, told with a perfect ear for everything: gangsta street talk; academic posturing, both British and American; down-home black Floridian straight talk; and sassy, profane kids, both black and white.

Howard Belsey is a middle-class white liberal Englishman teaching abroad at Wellington, a thinly disguised version of one of the Ivies. He is a Rembrandt scholar who can't finish his book and a recent adulterer whose marriage is now on the slippery slope to disaster. His wife, Kiki, a black Floridian, is a warm, generous, competent wife, mother, and medical worker. Their children are Jerome, disgusted by his father's behavior, Zora, Wellington sophomore firebrand feminist and Levi, eager to be taken for a "homey," complete with baggy pants, hoodies and the ever-present iPod. This family has no secrets--at least not for long. They talk about everything, appropriate to the occasion or not. And, there is plenty to talk about.

The other half of the story is that of the Kipps family: Monty, stiff, wealthy ultra-conservative vocal Christian and Rembrandt scholar, whose book has been published. His wife Carlene is always slightly out of focus, and that's the way she wants it. She wafts over all proceedings, never really connecting with anyone. That seems to be endemic in the Kipps household. Son Michael is a bit of a Monty clone and daughter Victoria is not at all what Daddy thinks she is. Indeed, Forster's advice, "Only connect," is lost on this group.

The two academics have long been rivals, detesting each other's politics and disagreeing about Rembrandt. They are thrown into further conflict when Jerome leaves Wellington to get away from the discovery of his father's affair, lands on the Kipps' doorstep, falls for Victoria and mistakes what he has going with her for love. Howard makes it worse by trying to fix it. Then, Kipps is granted a visiting professorship at Wellington and the whole family arrives in Massachusetts.

From this raw material, Smith has fashioned a superb book, her best to date. She has interwoven class, race, and gender and taken everyone prisoner. Her even-handed renditions of liberal and/or conservative mouthings are insightful, often hilarious, and damning to all. She has a great time exposing everyone's clay feet. This author is a young woman cynical beyond her years, and we are all richer for it. --Valerie Ryan

Average Customer Rating:

the empress' new clothes

This is pretty simple really. You will either find this book to be a masterpiece of modern fiction from one of the most exciting new voices in literature OR you will be amazed that this dull book of nothingness has managed to hoodwink the critics into thinking it is a wonder.

If you think the former you are WRONG.

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To think a Tree died for this book.

Talk about dont believe the hype this is truly an instance of that. A poor tree gave it's life for this book and to say nothing of all the man hours that went into writing this junk. Dont buy this book save your money. Nothing rings true of the book. It was like she was writing about a group of people she had heard about but never met. About places she had read a little about but never visited. There is no story here I would advice a soul to waste their time reading. Remember that is time you will wish you had that wasted time back on your death bed.

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Disappointing

I read "On Beauty" based on its favorable reviews and my fondness for "White Teeth." However, I was disappointed to find "On Beauty" a shallow and immature book with underdeveloped characters. Equally bothering to me is the cultural context, which does not ring true. I have lived in the Boston area most of my life and am an academic. Smith's knowledge of Boston is slight and removed, while her perception of academia is that of a student. In addition, she has a weak grasp of American English. These problems combined to destroy this reader's "willing suspension of disbelief."

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The Year of Magical Thinking
The Year of Magical Thinking

Saturday
Saturday

Never Let Me Go (Alex Awards (Awards))
Never Let Me Go (Alex Awards (Awards))

White Teeth: A Novel
White Teeth: A Novel

The March: A Novel
The March: A Novel
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