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Zadie Smith's debut White Teeth is a sprawling, talkative comedy about two unlikely friends and the children who scatter in directions their fathers never planned. Set across decades of multicultural London, it's a big, bustling family novel for readers who love books packed with people, argument, and ideas.
The Review
Some debuts announce a voice. White Teeth practically kicks the door down. Zadie Smith was barely out of her twenties when she wrote it, and the book moves with the appetite of a writer who wants everything in the frame at once: three families, two world wars, religion, genetics, immigration, the awkward inheritance children get whether they want it or not. The engine of the whole thing is friendship. Archie Jones is a pleasant, indecisive Englishman who can't quite commit to dying or living, and Samad Iqbal is a Bengali waiter burning with thwarted dignity and the conviction that he was meant for something larger. Their bond is funny and a little absurd, and Smith treats it with real tenderness even while she's poking at it.
What carries you is the sentences. Smith writes comedy that's tuned to the way actual people talk, all bluster and self-justification and family arguments that loop and escalate. She can pin a character in a single mortifying gesture, then widen out to a paragraph that takes on the whole sweep of a century. Samad is the book's most alive creation, a man so afraid his sons will lose their roots that he makes one catastrophic decision and then spends years watching it curdle. The twins, Magid and Millat, split in ways nobody could have scripted, and Irie, Clara and Archie's daughter, clever and uncomfortable in her own body, becomes the watchful heart of the younger generation. These kids are the real subject. The novel is about what the second generation does with the wounds and dreams handed down to them, and how often the handing-down backfires.
Thematically it's rich without being solemn. Smith keeps circling teeth, roots, and bloodlines, the things we think determine us versus the messy chance that actually runs our lives. Archie's whole life turns on a coin flip more than once, and that's the book's argument in miniature: history is grand and tragic, but individual fate is often ridiculous and arbitrary. She holds faith, science, and family loyalty up to the same skeptical, affectionate light. Nobody gets to be purely a victim or purely a fool. That generosity is what keeps the satire from going cold.
The honest catch is structure. White Teeth is maximalist, and the last stretch pulls in a cult-ish science group, animal-rights activists, and a convergence that leans hard on coincidence to get everyone into one room. The plot doesn't tighten so much as accumulate, and to my eye a few late developments feel engineered rather than earned. The energy never flags, but the shapeliness does. If you want a lean story with a clean emotional payoff, the sheer volume here may wear on you. This is a novel that prizes abundance over tidiness.
But taken on its own terms, it's a remarkable performance, funny and humane and bursting with the noise of real city life. To my mind it holds up because it never reduces its people to representatives of a category. They're stubborn, embarrassing, and specific. Read it for the talk, the comedy, and the ache underneath the jokes, and forgive it the chaos of its ending. The wonder is how much feeling Smith packs in around all the cleverness.
Reviewed by Avery
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