NW (novel)
Author | Zadie Smith |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Novel, experimental novel, tragicomedy |
Publisher | Hamish Hamilton, London |
Publication date | 27 August 2012 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 304 pp |
ISBN | 0-241-14414-0 |
823.914 |
NW is a 2012 novel by British author Zadie Smith. It takes its title from the NW postcode area in North-West London, where the novel is set. The novel is experimental and follows four different characters living in London, shifting between first and third person, stream-of-consciousness, screenplay-style dialogue, and other narrative techniques in an attempt to reflect the polyphonic nature of contemporary, urban life. It was nominated for the 2013 Women's Prize for Fiction.
Content
Plot
Set in the northwest of London, England, four locals — Leah Hanwell, Natalie (born Keisha) Blake, Felix Cooper, and Nathan Bogle — try to make adult lives outside of Caldwell, the working-class council estate where they grew up. While Leah has not managed to venture far from her childhood location, her best friend Natalie, now a successful, self-made barrister, lives in an affluent neighbourhood in a Victorian house. Despite their friendship and history, the two women find that they are very different from each other socio-economically. Meanwhile, a chance encounter brings Felix and Nathan together. Leah is the focus of a lower-working-class life in comparison to Natalie who represents the small higher-working-class. All four characters represent a piece of the lost generation struggling to ascend economically.[1]
Part 1 – "visitation": Leah Hanwell falls for a scam artist, who knocks at her door to ask for financial support in an emergency. The encounter with the scammer leads her to question her trust in the community.
Part 2 – "guest": Former drug addict Felix Cooper wants to start a new life with his girlfriend Grace. He meets one last time with his drug-using ex-lover to say goodbye and officially leave that part of his life behind. On his way home he is murdered during an armed robbery.
Part 3 - "host": Natalie Blake has met every goal she ever set for herself. She graduated from a prestigious university, became a successful lawyer, married an investment banker from a rich family, and moved to one of to the most expensive parts of London to raise her two children with him. But she leads a double-life, using the Internet to arrange secret sexual encounters with swinger couples.
Part 4 – "crossing": Natalie's husband discovers the online account Natalie uses for her affairs and calls her out. Upset by the confrontation, Natalie spends the night aimlessly wandering the streets of her old neighbourhood. She meets Nathan Bogle, a former classmate who became a drug addict. He seems to be involved in some sort of shady business. Natalie is about to jump from a bridge, but Nathan stops her.
Part 5 – "visitation": Natalie's friend Leah also has marital problems – her husband Michel has discovered that she has been lying about no longer taking birth control. Leah finally admits that she does not share his desire for children. The quarrel is interrupted by Natalie, who wants to discuss her encounter with Nathan with Leah. News about an armed robbery resulting in the death of the victim makes recent events appear in a new light. Leah and Natalie conclude that Nathan must be involved in the crime and decide to inform the police.
Characters
Leah Hanwell: Her parents are from Ireland and were able to provide a stable home for Leah. Unlike her best friend Natalie, Leah has never been very ambitious and still lives in her old neighbourhood. She is content with her job, working for an organisation distributing lottery earnings to social projects and still very attracted to her husband Michel, a Frenchman with Algerian roots. But while Leah does not want her life to change, Michel wants children. Leah has been avoiding the confrontation and lies about no longer taking her birth control. Although Leah is generally at peace with the choices she has made so far and therefore should have little reason to envy Natalie, she's increasingly ill-at-ease with her successful friend's new-found wealth and status.
Felix Cooper: After struggling with drug addiction for years, Felix is about to turn his life around. He cuts ties with people from his drug-dominated past and makes plans for a career in film. His new lease on life is inspired by his new girlfriend Grace, whose optimism and can-do-spirit is contagious.
Natalie Blake: Natalie's parents are from Jamaica. They originally gave her the name Keisha, which Natalie dropped during her time at university, to better fit in with her new social circle. After graduating from a prestigious university, becoming a successful lawyer and marrying into money, Natalie is the only member of her family who is upwardly mobile. This enables her to financially support her previously convicted younger brother and her older sister's large family. Nevertheless, Natalie is regularly accused of being a "coconut" – black outside, white inside; someone who denies her origins to pander to the ruling class. Natalie feels increasingly alienated from her original community and cannot even open up to her childhood friend Leah.
Nathan Bogle: As a young boy, he showed great potential as a football player. His ambitions were foiled by his drug addiction. Now he earns his living through illegal activities, operating from a house in Leah's street.
Themes
One of the novel's main themes is the restructuring of the class system. Whereas one's ethnicity used to be seen as an identity defining feature, it now no longer automatically entails membership in any specific milieu, as illustrated by Natalie's example. In the highly competitive society of Natalie's London, belonging to an ethnic minority no longer guarantees any form of mutual solidarity.[2] Tensions between the different classes of London remain prevalent in the face of increasing disparities in income (and other forms of wealth inequality) even as ambitious immigrants join the upper class via their own wealth accumulation.[3]
In a world with an increasing variety of lifestyle choices, the issue of self examination gains importance. Leah, who sees no appeal in the traditional maternal role, rejecting still widespread societal expectations, cuts to the core of this new liberty: "I am the sole author of the dictionary that defines me." This freedom of self-definition however also comes with increased responsibility. Getting to choose means having to carefully consider your choices and having more occasion for doubts. In NW, the possibility of being the sole author of your own life is portrayed as a blessing and a curse at the same time.[3]
Self-examination, however, does not always protect against delusion. In a quest to be all things to all people, a person can lose sight of their innermost self. In contrast to Leah, Natalie has always tried her best to meet societal expectations – in her role as daughter, sister, mother, wife, lawyer, rich person, poor person, Briton and Jamaican. Each of these roles demands its own costume. Natalie comes to see them as cage, from which she tries to escape, through her sexual escapades.[2]
The novel portrays different reactions to the social pressures placed on women with regard to motherhood. Leah ultimately resists the pressure, but still feels a need to hide her desire to remain childless as long as possible. Natalie wants to meet social expectations of motherhood, but in a way that does not hamper her career – to her, having it all is mostly a question of timing, allowing her to meet personal as well as professional objectives. The novel also highlights different attitudes towards maternal perfectionism depending on someone's milieu. In Caldwell it is enough to abstain from physical violence to be considered a decent mother. Everywhere else, everything has to be perfect and even then the mother is not guaranteed to escape judgement.[4]
Form
Smith's style in NW is characterized by a rapid succession of associations, conveyed in brief sentences, dialogues and short scenes in a mix of literary and colloquial language.[2] Instead of an omniscient narrator, she uses various narrative techniques to portray the multiple layers and idiosyncrasies of her four central characters' perspectives. Natalie is efficient, goal-oriented, well-organized – her life is systematically laid out in 185 numbered vignettes. Leah in contrast is mellow and prefers to go with the flow – her part of the book is dominated by stream-of-consciousness.[5] Smith's use of this narrative technique invites comparisons to James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and John Dos Passos.[3][6]
The central characters' life stories are told independently, but juxtaposed in a manner that enhances mutual characterization. The use of various narrative techniques as well as the frequent change of perspective create a tension between internal and external views on the characters. While Smith places an emphasis on the interior, with characters like Leah, Natalie and Felix, she deliberately refrains from guiding readers' sympathies towards Nathan, neglecting to portray his inner life. She aims for Nathan to remain a stranger to readers, in order to confront them with their reaction to such a character – the sort of isolated, homeless addict, who is likely to be perceived as a threat first and foremost. The objective is to preserve his otherness.[5]
Reception
The novel was widely praised by critics, and in particular by James Wood, who criticised Smith's early work for its tendency towards what he called hysterical realism. Wood included the novel in his "Best Books of 2012" and commented that "underneath the formal experimentation runs a steady, clear, realistic genius. Smith is a great urban realist... the best novel she has yet written."[7] Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Philip Hensher gave the novel five stars, describing it as "a joyous, optimistic, angry masterpiece, and no better English novel will be published this year, or, probably, next."[8] Award-winning novelist Anne Enright reviewed the book for the New York Times, arguing that "the result is that rare thing, a book that is radical and passionate and real."[9]
Television adaptation
The novel was adapted into a 2016 television film by the BBC directed by Saul Dibb and written by Rachel Bennette,[10] starring Nikki Amuka-Bird and Phoebe Fox.[11] It was broadcast on BBC Two on 14 November 2016.[12][13]
References
- ^ Charles, Ron (28 August 2012). "'NW,' by Zadie Smith: A brilliant novel for the dedicated, attentive reader". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
- ^ a b c Johan Schloemann (9 January 2014), "Hier ist alles ein Kampf", Sueddeutsche.de (in German), ISSN 0174-4917, retrieved 21 May 2019
- ^ a b c Ijoma Mangold (9 January 2014), "Zadie Smith: "Außen braun, innen weiß"", Die Zeit (in German), Hamburg, ISSN 0044-2070, retrieved 20 May 2019
- ^ Tilman Spreckelsen (1 October 2014), "Zadie Smith: London NW: Deine Beichte ist die pure Selbstsucht, Natalie", Frankfurter Allgemeine (in German), ISSN 0174-4909, retrieved 21 May 2019
- ^ a b Nike Zafiris (14 May 2014). "Zadie Smith: "London NW" – "Freiheit ist furchterregend!"". Deutschlandfunk (in German).
- ^ James Wood (17 December 2012), "Books of the Year", The New Yorker (in German), ISSN 0028-792X, retrieved 21 May 2019
- ^ Wood, James, "Books of the Year", The New Yorker, 17 December 2012.
- ^ Hensher, Philip, "NW by Zadie Smith: review" , The Telegraph, 3 September 2012.
- ^ Enright, Anne, "Mind The Gap: 'NW' by Zadie Smith", The New York Times, 21 September 2012.
- ^ Wollaston, Sam. "NW review – Zadie Smith's London tale has never felt so relevant". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
- ^ Onwuemezi, Natasha, "Amuka-Bird and Fox to star in NW adaptation", The Bookseller, 10 June 2016.
- ^ Meltzer, Tom, "NW star Nikki Amuka-Bird: 'Zadie is purposefully challenging the viewer'", The Guardian, 14 November 2016.
- ^ Lobb, Adrian, "NW Star Nikki Amuka-Bird Interview: 'Bursting through the glass ceiling can cause damage'", The Big Issue, 21 November 2016.
Further reading
- Houser, Tammy Amiel. (2017). ‘Zadie Smith's NW: Unsettling the Promise of Empathy’. Contemporary Literature, 58 (1). University of Wisconsin Press, 116–148.
- James, David. (2013). ‘Wounded Realism’. Contemporary Literature, 54(1), 204–214.
- Kakutani, Michiko. (2012). ‘Navigating Tangled Narratives: ‘NW’ by Zadie Smith’. The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/27/books/nw-by-zadie-smith.html
- Knepper, Wendy. (2013). ‘Revisionary Modernism and Postmillennial Experimentation in Zadie Smith’s NW’. In Philip Tew (Ed.) Reading Zadie Smith: The First Decade and Beyond. London: Bloomsbury, 111–126.
- Masters, Ben. (2017). ‘Twenty-First-Century Excess: Levels of Narration in Contemporary Fiction’. In Novel Style: Ethics and Excess in English Fiction since the 1960s. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 137–172.
- Shaw, Kristian. (2017). ‘“Global Consciousness. Local Consciousness”: Cosmopolitan Hospitality and Ethical Agency in Zadie Smith's NW’. In Cosmopolitanism in Twenty-First Century Fiction. Palgrave Macmillan, 67–102.
- Smith, Zadie. (2013). 'Zadie Smith on NW – Guardian book club'. The Guadian: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/aug/01/zadie-smith-nw-book-club
- Wood, James (2012). ‘Books of the Year’. The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/books-of-the-year