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On Beauty by Zadie Smith
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On Beauty (original 2005; edition 2006)

by Zadie Smith (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
9,350225840 (3.64)1 / 552
Set between New England and London, On Beauty concerns a pair of feuding families - the Belseys and the Kipps - and a clutch of doomed affairs. It puts low morals among high ideals and asks some searching questions about what life does to love.
  1. 71
    Howards End by E. M. Forster (GCPLreader)
    GCPLreader: Read the novel that On Beauty pays homage to.
  2. 00
    Foreign Affairs by Alison Lurie (withwill)
  3. 01
    Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher (charl08)
    charl08: One a more 'traditional' campus novel, perhaps, but similar themes re English literature as taught at US colleges.
  4. 02
    The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides (BookshelfMonstrosity)
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 Orange January/July: On Beauty by Zadie Smith3 unread / 3rebeccanyc, July 2012

» See also 552 mentions

English (213)  Dutch (4)  Hebrew (2)  Spanish (1)  Swedish (1)  Norwegian (1)  French (1)  All languages (223)
Showing 1-5 of 213 (next | show all)
It's taken me five weeks to plough through this book. I don't know why. Zadie Smith writes well and develops her characters. I'm not uninterested in a family saga between two University families who have fallen out. I suppose I was uninterested in the personalities involved who were on the whole unlikeable. I never quite got to the point of abandoning the book. It was just rather hard to pick it up again each time I'd put it down. ( )
  Margaret09 | Apr 15, 2024 |
Not as brilliant as White Teeth but an enjoyable read if you like academic comedic novels ala David Lodge. ( )
  monicaberger | Jan 22, 2024 |
Great writing, great characters, and wonderfully descriptive portrayals of family scenes and conversations....or as the NYT reviewer said "...wonderfully observed..." ( )
  ellink | Jan 22, 2024 |
Engrossing family tale (not as good as White Teeth) but a great climax and denouement. ( )
  mjspear | May 16, 2023 |
This is one of those books that's very hard to rate with stars. I found it to be marvelously written but I wasn't interested in the story. It's not the fault of the author (again, wonderfully written) but it just happens to not be the type of story that draws me in. ( )
  sgwordy | Dec 31, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 213 (next | show all)
On Beauty" is that rare comic novel about the divisive cultural politics of the new century likely to amuse readers on the right as much as those on the left. (Not that they'll necessarily be laughing in the same places.) Yet Smith is up to more as well: she wants to rise above the fray even as she wallows in it, to hit a high note of idealism rather than sink into the general despair. How radical can you be? Blame it on her youth.
 
Beautifully observed details of clothing, weather, cityscapes and the bustling human background of drivers, shoppers and passers-by are constantly being folded into the central flow of thought, feeling and action, giving even the most mundane moments - Levi riding a bus into Boston, Howard setting up a projector - a dense, pulsing life.
 
On Beauty is quieter. There is a complicated story making up by richness of implication what it lacks in exuberance. The culture of the Boston campus is set among the other cultures such a city harbours. Carl, the outsider who enters the story because of the muddle at the concert, is far from being a replica of Leonard Bast. He’s an exponent of rap culture – and it is a culture, unlike Bast’s pathetic aspirations. The power of his rap has to be explained, and indeed the author intervenes personally to endorse it: ‘the present-day American poets, the rappers’. The mufflered pink-cheeked charm of a New England campus in winter is very agreeably rendered. The row between Professor Belsey and Kiki when she finds out he’s been cheating is as deft as anybody could make it, he with his stumbling, evasive academic dialect and she with her ‘personal’ language and naturally inflexible notions of fidelity and honour.

In a late scene Kiki is sorting out her children’s accumulated belongings. As she is carrying two bags of her elder son’s ‘pre-growth-spurt clothes’, we are told:

Last year, she had not thought she would still be in this house, in this marriage, come spring. But here she was, here she was. A tear in the garbage bag freed three pairs of pants and a sweater. Kiki crouched to pick these up and, as she did so, the second bag split too. She had packed them too heavy. The greatest lie ever told about love is that it sets you free.

What makes this passage brilliant is that the sententia at the end, though it may be true, is somehow made ironical because it is Kiki, there among all the random evidence of her love, who is uttering it, and not some cheat, some intellectual, some person of recognised authority. She is the measure of Zadie Smith’s powers at 30, Forster’s age when he published Howards End.
 

» Add other authors (13 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Zadie Smithprimary authorall editionscalculated
Eggermont, MoniqueTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Pouwels, KittyTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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We refuse to b each other. H.J.Blackham
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For my dear Laird.
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One may as well begin with Jerome's e-mails to his father.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Set between New England and London, On Beauty concerns a pair of feuding families - the Belseys and the Kipps - and a clutch of doomed affairs. It puts low morals among high ideals and asks some searching questions about what life does to love.

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En grotesk og morsom beretning om fjendskabet mellem to kunsthistorikere. Om universitetsliv, om kærlighed og sex og om at blive voksen.
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