Z is for Zadie Smith

Born 1975

From the age of 5 to 15 Zadie Smith wanted to be an actress. She was pretty good at tap dancing and dreamt of starring in a musical. By the time she was in her mid teens she realised there were hardly any musicals being made and decided to part with that dream. And then writing happened.




She was born in London to a British father and Jamaican mother who migrated to Britain in 1969. She was christened Sadie Smith. At 14 she changed her name to Zadie. Interestingly a love for music runs in the family as two of her younger brothers are rappers.

Her debut


... was the stuff of fairy tales. At the University while studying English Literature she published a few short stories for a collection of new student writing called Mays AnthologyA publisher read those stories and offered her a contract for her first book, which made her go in search of a literary agent. Seems like a dream debut, doesn't it? 
On the basis of a partial manuscript her book was auctioned among publishers. During her final year at Cambridge she finished her book, White Teeth. It was an runaway success. So overwhelmed was she that she went into a writer's block. "I think (the success of this book is) a surprise which will last me my whole life," she said in an interview. Her second book Autograph Man also proved to be a success.


White Teeth 


...began as a short story except it was hardly short, more of a Novella. And so she decided to expand it into a full sized novel. It spans three generations telling the story of two friends, World War II veterans Archie and Samad. It follows their lives and then of their children who pick varied paths in life. It touches upon issues of immigrants, war, religion and friendship. I liked the way the book jumps back and forth between England, Jamaica and Bangladesh bringing it all alive through vibrant descriptions.

On writing


.... Smith has rather interesting views. First, she doesn't believe in creative writing classes. She dismisses them as 'support groups for writers who find writing therapeutic'.  And writing's no therapy, she feels. She advises extensive reading as the best way to become a writer. "The more people you read the better writer you become," she says.
She likes to write in 'any small room with no natural lighting'. She's quite the rule breaker when it comes to a writing regime. Some days she writes all day and some days she cannot get beyond two hours. She hates being told about successful authors who follow specific regimes. 

Isn't that heartening? Perhaps it IS okay to do things your own way and follow no one at all. So it doesn't matter that Enid Blyton wrote 10,000 words a day in her 'red' room, or that Ian Fleming needed to get away to Jamaica each year to get that novel done, or that Dahl moved to his tiny shed away from the house. All one needs to do to become a writer is do things her own way and write from the heart.
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And finally that's The End! The April A to Z Challenge ends today and I really have no idea what I'll do with myself. Looking forward to visiting all you lovely people now.
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This post is part of the April A to Z Challenge, 2014 for the theme AMAZING AUTHORS.


Also linking to the Ultimate Blog Challenge.


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