It takes
time to understand what the novel Autumn
by Scottish writer Ali Smith
is about. And when you do, you realize you still may not know, not fully, not
completely. You peel back the proverbial onion, and keep peeling. Or you
discover what you’re reading is a kachina doll, with a story inside a story inside
still another story.
Elisabeth
is in her early 30s. She studied art history and criticism. She grew up in a
fatherless home, reared by a mother who cared for her but didn’t seem too
interested. When she was a child, she becomes friends with Daniel Gluck, the
elderly man who lives next door. Daniel becomes the catalyst that opens her
intellectual mind, and he gets her to see things she never would have seen
otherwise.
But who is
Daniel? We first meet him when Elisabeth is visiting him in an assisted living
home. He’s more than a century old, and he sleeps most of the time. We see his
dreams, and we see small and rather incomplete snatches of his past, like the
sister arrested by the Nazis in France, who steps out of the police van into a
crowd of women and disappears.
But as the
story develops, we begin to wonder who Elisabeth is. She’s an 8-year-old child.
She’s a young woman in college. She is one of the first art critics to become
interested in British pop artist and actress Pauline Boty, who died at
28 and had an uncredited role in the 1966 movie Alfie that
starred Michael Caine. It is through her research on Boty that Elisabeth
becomes interested in Christine Keeler, the showgirl who helped to blow up
British politics and the government of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in 1963
(Keller died Dec. 5; she was simultaneously having affairs with a British
cabinet minister and a Soviet diplomat).
The story
moves back and forth through the past and present. Slowly we come to see that
Smith is writing about women, and the world they inhabit that is shaped by men.
Elisabeth herself is able to break partially free because of the man Daniel,
and even then she (and we) are not sure what she’s breaking free from, or if
she’s truly broken free.
Ali Smith |
Smith is
one of Scotland’s leading writers. The author of five short story collections
and nine novels, she’s received numerous prizes and recognitions. Autumn was shortlisted for the Man
Booker Prize. She’s also the author of several plays. She received a joint
degree in English language and literature from the University of Aberdeen,
studied at Cambridge, and worked at the University of Strathclyde as a lecturer
in Scottish, English, and American literature. She lives in Cambridge. Her most
recent novel, Winter, has just been published in the
United States.
Autumn is
a quietly powerful novel, one that moves in unexpected directions. It’s
unsettling. It’s unconventional. And it is rather remarkable.
Top photograph by Bernd Schultz via
Unsplash. Used with
permission. Photograph of Ali Smith via Wikipedia. Used with permission under Creative Commons.
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