Ratings23
Average rating3.7
An essay collection hastily written and rushed into print. She's a great writer, but I could have lived without this.
3.5*
It definitely got me curious to read some of her fiction works, however while reading this one in particular I was left wondering “who hurt you? what did they do to you?”. While I was able to resonate with her portrait of the modern world in some aspects, I was completely taken aback by others. Maybe we just live in different worlds
Sometimes pleasantly poky, sometimes powerful essay collection written during over the past few months. I love small books.
❤️. Audiobook because her words in her voice are magic. I will be listening to this again because it perfectly fits this moment.
There will be no shortage of books written about our current year. Scientific examinations of the virus, stories focused on New York hospital's response in the early months of the pandemic, speculative fictions, alternate histories, intersectional narratives and more. Zadie Smith's Intimations comes out of the gate fast (Proceeds from the book are going to the Equal Justice Initiative and the COVID-19 Emergency Relief Fund for New York) and has me pining for the bygone days that marked the height of blogging.
I don't mean it in a dismissive way. Smith is of course a polished writer, her six essays are snapshots of a moment, stolen fragments with a precise attention to the little details. But it has me remembering when I'd start off the day reading from a host of bloggers doing just that, boiling down personal moments into consumable online essays. It was for them, as it is for Smith, something to do. I realize I want more of that, a connection to how individuals are navigating this moment without grandiose statements around race, polarization, social media and American individualism. Just more pre-menopausal women clinging to the bars of the Market Garden staring at tulips.