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On Beauty |
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Smith's third novel is a 21st century take on E.M. Forster's "Howards End."
Penguin Press, 464 pages
09/13/2005
$25.95
ISBN: 1594200637
Fiction
General Literature & Fiction
All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...
The average user rating for this book is 7.3 (out of 10) based on 17 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Marie A gave it a9:
I loved being in Zadie Smith's Wellington world for most of this novel. Slow start, but once the characters' somewhat separate stories connected together this was a quite enjoyable, if not a modern E.M. Forrester-like read.
Tommy A gave it a1:
What a piece of convoluted faux-intellectual garbage. Word, yo, as her stupid characters would say.
Rosie R gave it a5:
Competent and quite engrossing, but ultimately disappointing. This is a book to read for its plot; there is little of interest here in form or style.
Helen S gave it a6:
A page turning read especially for an avid Forster fan but disappointing in the final analysis. Characterisation is amusing but the overall thematic significance of Howards End is unattainable. It steals from Forster and gives back a ragged, distorted shadow of his great work. Smith does not deserve to call herself a fan of the greatest novelist of all time.
William D gave it an8:
A mixed bag. I thought the satire wasn't sharp enough and the male characters more one dimensional than "White Teeth" Still, this is carping...her talent and intellect are fairly stunning
Michael K gave it a10:
I love all of her books including the brilliant and underrated Autograph Man. White Teeth is a comic novel about working class Londoners; On Beauty is a satire of cultural politics set in an academic community not unlike Cambridge, MA. White Teeth is about the cultural interaction of Bengali, Arabic, black, and white Londoners; On Beauty explores issues of social class as represented by the Kipps and Belsey familiies, but also by Carl Thomas and Choo, both of Roxbury. First-time novelist Stephen L. Carter received a 2-book deal worth $2.2 million for his Emperor of Ocean Park, a thriller-like novel set in an essentially conservative segment of the upper-class black academic world. On Beauty goes much deeper than that and satirizes both sides. In White Teeth, when Joyce Chalfen tells Clara Bowden that it's the "responsibility of intellectuals" to educate children like Irie Jones, it echoes the outdated historical idea of the "White Man's Burden," however, that's not what's happening in On Beauty. And finally, I think it's funny that E.M. Forster's Wilcoxes show up here as owners of a chain of preppy clothing stores!
Dan B. gave it a9:
Everytime I read a book by her I want to marry her.

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