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Sam Redlark's avatar

I am little envious that Smith got to experience a convergence of literary filth and teenage hormones, sufficient to generate an updraught that was capable of carrying a book from horny teenager to horny teenager in her peer group. That kind of heat generates sparks, and sparks can take you anywhere.

I attended a violent comprehensive school where reading was not prized. Looking back, it is astonishing what a cultural desert it was. Where you might expect allegiances to form around bands or football teams, there was instead a bannerless tribalism, crumb-fed on fragments of pornography of the pictorial variety, and later in the form of a primitive gif file of a woman performing oral sex, that would crash the school computer network whenever it was run. We were brutes. It is a miracle that our floor-dragging knuckles overcame their own friction and gained a semblance of altitude.

From the perspective of a white, British man, my experience of this book was obviously very different from Smith's. She saw elements of her own life reflected in the novel.

For me, this was my first insight into a world that I had long coexisted with, but knew absolutely nothing about. The Asian kids at my junior school tended to be studious and insular; smart enough to pass the 11+ and vanish over the educational horizon. My interactions with the Pakistani community in my home town began and ended at a newsagents, close to my home, that would open on Sundays in a time when nothing else did. I would go in there sometimes to buy sweets.

My staggered discovery of The Buddha of Suburbia began with the David Bowie song, then the TV drama, then the book. It was a while before I made the connection with My Beautiful Launderette and Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, which I loved, and which had Roland Gift from Fine Young Cannibals in it.

'In Search of Genitals' could easily be the title of a Victorian travelogue. The account of a bespectacled, sandy-haired English missionary, who has fallen foul of a practical joke played on him by a malevolent translator:

“Another day where I hoped to catch a glimpse of the girthy palace spire, that I am told occupies the absolute centre of the city of Genitals. My guide blames sandstorms to the east. He assures me that, by the week's end, I will surely lay eyes upon Genitals, and be the first Englishman to do so in many centuries...”

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Wim's avatar

A great book and great analysis by Zadie.

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