White Teeth
In the author's words, this novel is an attempt at a comic family epic of little England into which an explosion of ethnic colour is injected . It tells the story of three families, one indian, one white, one mixed, in North London and Oxford from World War II to now.
Sorry, title is now out of print.
Quick Reference
| ISBN |
9780241139974 |
| Published |
27 January 2000 by Penguin |
| Format |
Hardback |
| Author(s) |
By Smith, Zadie |
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Full details for this title
| ISBN-13 |
9780241139974 |
| ISBN-10 |
024113997X |
|
| Stock |
Out of stock |
| Status |
Out of print |
|
| Publisher |
Penguin |
| Imprint |
Hamish Hamilton Ltd |
| Publication Date |
27 January 2000
|
| Publication Country |
United Kingdom |
|
| Format |
Hardback |
|
| Author(s) |
By Smith, Zadie |
| Category |
Award Winning Modern Fiction
|
|
| Interest Age |
All ages |
| Reading Age |
All ages |
| Library of Congress |
Immigrants, Great Britain, Fiction |
| NBS Text |
General & Literary Fiction |
| ONIX Text |
General/trade |
|
| Number of Pages |
480 |
| Dimensions |
Width: 160mm Height: 242mm
|
| Weight |
851g |
|
| Dewey Code |
823.92 |
| Catalogue Code |
Not specified |
Description of this Book
In the author's words, this is an attempt at a comic family epic of Little England into which an explosion of ethnic colour is injected , telling the story of three families, one Indian, one white, one mixed, in North London and Oxford from World War II to now.
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Awards & Reviews
| Awards |
Winner of Betty Trask Award 2001.
|
| UK Review |
Over the last two decades, what is described in Smith's White Teeth as 'the great ocean-crossing experiment', has added a large dose of fertilizer to British literature, enabling it to flower as never before. And now, with White Teeth, there are signs of fresh growth. 'Do you think anybody is English? Really English? It's a fairytale!' snorts one of the many engaging characters in Smith's impressive debut. 'You look back and back and back and it's still easier to find the correct Hoover bag than to find one pure person, one pure faith, on the whole globe'. Smith's disillusioned men, frustrated women and torn teenagers are 'midnight's grandchildren', for whom cultural meltdown, segregation and reinvention are recurring themes. Zapping nonchalantly through time, the narrative charts the tragi-comic progress of Samad Iqbal and Archie Jones from World War II to 1990s London. It's here, amid the caffs and tikka restaurants of Willesden that both men settle and found families - Archie with the Afro-Caribbean Clara, and Samad with Alsana, who comes from his native Bengal. And it is here that their assorted offspring do battle with the expectations and hypocrisies of their elders, the seductive lure of fundamentalism, and the insidious colonization of the ghastly Chalfen family, champions of middle-class brain power and breeders of transgenic mice. Smith's habit of switching protagonists almost in mid-stream gives the book a directionless feel, but what the novel lacks in narrative drive it makes up for in humour, verve and stylistic playfulness. And while Smith's intelligent, feisty prose style bears more than a passing resemblance to Rushdie's, the territory she lays claim to is uniquely her own. A writer to watch. Reviewed by Liz Jensen, the author of Ark Baby and Egg Dancing. Editor's note: Shortlisted for the 2000 Orange Prize. (Kirkus UK) |
| US Review |
An impressively witty satirical first novel, London-set, chronicling the experiences of two eccentric multiracial families during the last half of the 20th century. When Archie Joness suicide attempt on New Years Day 1975 is stymied by a finicky butcher (who frowns upon such things taking place in a car parked illegally in front of his establishment, especially when hes awaiting an early morning delivery), his life is changed forever. Lamenting the break up of his marriage, the distraught and disoriented Archiea middle-aged Brit who fancies himself in the direct-mail business but actually spends his life folding papersthen wanders into an end-of-the-world party where he meets his next wife. Jamaican Clara Bowden is 19 to Archies 47, at six feet tall she towers over him, and shes missing all her upper teeth, the result of a motorcycle mishap. Nonetheless, six weeks later the mismatched pair are married and living near Archies WWII buddy Samad Iqbal, a Bengali Muslim. And so begins Smiths frenetic, riotous, unruly tale, which hops, skips, and jumps from one end of the century to the other while following the Jones and Iqbal broods. Archie and Clara have a daughter, Irie, whose name translates into ``no problem' (although she has plenty of them); Samad, who is head waiter at an Indian restaurant, has twin sons, Millat and Magid. When theyre nine, their father separates the boys, sending Magid back to Bangladesh to be raised the old-fashioned way, far from the corruption of postwar London, filled with its mods and rockers and hippies and Englishmen and other bad influencesincluding Samad himself, who has been lusting after his twins schoolteacher. There isnt much of a plot here, the book being swept along by a series of sometimes hilarious, oft-times clever, occasionally tedious riffs on everything from race relations through eugenics and on to religion, but 25-year-old Smith is a marvelously talented writer with a wonderful ear for dialogue. (Kirkus Reviews) |
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Author's Bio
There is no author biography for this title.
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