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After reading White
Teeth I pretty much decided to read anything and everything that
Zadie Smith put out. It figured to not be a huge investment, but at
least showed some loyalty to the author of a book I loved and respected.
Her second book, The
Autograph Man, was honestly a bit of a letdown after the spectacular
debut. This is somewhat a return to form, but is lacking some of the
humor and levity that I found so refreshing in White Teeth.
Staying with her familial, character-driven storyline, Smith weaves
the tale of the multi-racial Belsey family and their struggles with
life, fidelity and growing older. Let me start by saying that I never
once took an art history course in college, so some of the Rembrandt
stuff just flew over my head. That's important in the scheme of things
because the novel's main character, Howard Belsey, is an art history
professor at a private New England university teaching a class on
Rembrandt. The funny thing is Howard thinks that Rembrandt is merely
a portrait painter for wealthy folks, and not the genius master that
one would expect a Rembrandt scholar to think he was. It's only one
in a handful of contradictions that guide Howard's life. He is, in
fact, a rather difficult person in many regards, and that's not just
because he's an uptight white Brit. His wife, Kiki, an African-American
woman who was once a thin, attractive rebel has become a bored, corpulent
house wife after thirty years of marriage seems to put up with his
crankiness out of sheer exhaustion. Meanwhile their children struggle
just being his kids. They also struggle with their blackness (or half
blackness in this case), their religious beliefs (Kiki and Howard
are not only not religious, but are pretty much anti-religious), their
sexuality and on and on. In fact, Howard's life is lead by his need
to be anti. The problem is that when you spend all your energy and
passion railing against everything, you find yourself with nothing
left to appreciate or care for anything. This is the predicament that
Howard finds himself in, and the feeling that everyone around him
feels. This is deepened when his Rembrandt nemesis, Monty Kipps, comes
to teach at the university. There are all sorts of pre-existing entanglements
with the two of them, as well as with their children, and wackiness
ensues. The book has a relatively serious tone, as Kiki and Howard
deal with their crumbling marriage, her stifling loneliness and his
passionless passion for anything. Mixed in are some Haitian politics,
the art of hip-hop, affirmative action and infidelity in all its best.
Smith packs a lot in her books, which in some ways adds to the scope
of an otherwise simple plot, but also clouds some of the stronger
points by masking them in too many layers. All in all I enjoyed this
book, but at times felt bogged down by the weight of everything. I
miss the quirkiness. I miss the laughs. I'm hoping the next book doesn't
take itself quite so seriously, and tries to break out of the family
drama mold a little bit. Well, whatever it is, I'll be buying it.
Other titles by Zadie Smith:
The Autograph
Man
White Teeth
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