Zadie Smith鈥檚 鈥楪rand Union鈥 is a superb m茅lange of short stories
She captures contemporary life through multifarious voices, exploring race and class, gender roles, generational differences, and politics.
She captures contemporary life through multifarious voices, exploring race and class, gender roles, generational differences, and politics.
Arguably one of the greatest writers of her generation, Zadie Smith has published five novels as well as two collections of essays. She鈥檚 racked up lists of awards and gathered hordes of fans along the way. Her latest effort, 鈥淕rand Union,鈥 is her first book of short stories.
By its very definition, a collection of stories will offer variety, but Smith takes this promise to a new level. The 19 tales of 鈥淕rand Union鈥 make up a remarkably diverse collection. Written in a range of styles, her stories capture the complexities of contemporary life through multifarious voices. It鈥檚 all here 鈥 explorations of race and class, gender roles and generational differences, and a myriad of political debates.
And she explores those perspectives from an equally diverse assortment of genres, including fantasy and memoir. When finishing one story and turning the page to start another, the reader is never sure what will come next. Still, Smith brings her powers of description and her astute observations to each entry, skillfully modifying the language and syntax to match the perspective. The talent that has attracted her loyal following is on full display in 鈥淕rand Union.鈥
Some stories will be familiar to readers. Eight have been published before, mostly in The New Yorker, but 11 of the pieces are new to this collection and are also among its best.
In 鈥淭he Lazy River,鈥 Smith delves into metaphor to illustrate the inertia of privileged people鈥檚 lives. The narrator, a British tourist in Southern Spain, rambles on about the water attraction at the resort, a continuously moving stream that carries everyone forward with no effort required. The river, of course, flows in a circle, never really getting anywhere. It offers an illusion of movement. 鈥淲e are 鈥榞oing with the flow,鈥欌 the narrator says.
Each of the stories in 鈥淕rand Union鈥 includes a measure of self-reflection, but that element is most evident in 鈥淏locked.鈥 For context, Smith wrote her first novel, 鈥淲hite Teeth,鈥 while she was still a college student at Cambridge University. The book quickly became a bestseller and was later adapted for television. While she experienced incredible early success, Smith has shared in interviews that the experience also set her up for overwhelming self-doubt. How could she possibly repeat that success? Her response, for a while, was to write nothing 鈥 or at least, finish nothing. Instead, she got a dog. As this experience plays out for the narrator of 鈥淏locked,鈥 tending to 鈥渄ear old Butler鈥 is enough to fill the days spent pushing through creative stasis. But in the hands of someone with Smith鈥檚 talent, even the mundane activity of walking a dog becomes a treasure of observation and reflection.
It goes without saying that not every story will appeal to every reader. Smith鈥檚 candor is unapologetic. Her descriptions can be explicit in ways that some readers might find offensive. Her choices in this area are not gratuitous, but she does include depictions of some of the harsher aspects of the world, and she does so unflinchingly.
This being said, when a reader finds the stories that resonate 鈥 that seem familiar because they capture aspects of contemporary life, or express an experience that reveals that people have more in common than it sometimes seems 鈥 Smith鈥檚 stories seem golden.