
This Cultural Life Zadie Smith
May 30, 2024
Zadie Smith, novelist and essayist known for White Teeth and On Beauty, reflects on growing up in Willesden and how family shaped her voice. She recalls formative reads like The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. She discusses a creative partnership with poet Nick Laird, a trip to West Africa that fed Swing Time, and her shift into public essaying and refusal of social media.
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State School Music Closet Sparked Curiosity
- Smith benefited from a richly resourced state school with free or cheap music lessons and many instruments.
- She credits that old state provision for broad cultural education she fears is disappearing.
Neighbourhood As Miniature England
- Smith treats her NW London neighbourhood as a microcosm of English history containing immigration, industrialisation and gentrification.
- That concentrated social history repeatedly appears across her novels as a vital setting.
Meeting Nick Laird At University
- Smith met poet Nick Laird at university through a small anthology party and they exchanged writing for years before pairing.
- Laird's poetry sharpened her sense of language and he became her primary first reader.




















