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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Lovely book, 31 Mar 2001
This is a Kureshi book which does not deal with racial displacement. All the main characters are dealing with a type of displacement. the older characters all want to be in 'the Buddha of suburbia' to travel back in time to a place and time which they understand. I think that the fact that Kureshi uses his beloved characters from his older books, but does not really give them a voice shows how even they are displaced and almost unimportant in the present of his novel. His main protagonist is a young boy, who only belongs to the present, he is influenced by the older characters, but he is an observer and he uses his experiences not to draw away from his roots and family, but to re-unite them, Kureshi seems to be championing the family, rather than the society about which he is writing. I loved this book, it is Kureshi at his best, his humour and love for the 70's come out as it did in 'Buddha', the people who are linked with the past are wrapped up in cotton, their drug using fondly accounted, in comparison of his account of the 90's drug world which Gabriel is drawn into and ultimately saved from by his 70's loving father. Another great book from Kureshi for those of us who have been mislaid.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
a modern children`s story?, 11 Mar 2002
This isn`t tricksy, ironic, detached, dealing with huge important issues of race, gender class and `Art`, it`s an engaging, warm story which I see no reason can not be on the GCSE reading list for fifteen year olds, or whatever it is they have now in education. Reminiscent of the best novels told from a teenage point of view, `Kes`, or with a teen protagonist Roddy Doyle/Nick Hornby, it takes elements from his other works: the rock star character from `Buddah`, the sentimental education of `Black Album` and sprinkles it with magic realism to tell a charming tale which doesn`t outstay its welcome. The hero has, as a lot of Kureishi chracters do, an artistic talent,drawing, but this time it is deftly and unpretentiously dealt with. The kid`s father is one of Kureishi`s most successful characters; a musician who once played with someone famous and has been living off it ever since. The huge star he backed makes delightful appearances in some of the funnier sections. Although the female characters aren`t as deftly achieved, this novel is an excellent excavation of the relations between a father and son, which is fairly developing into a major theme in Kureishi`s work. Who would have thought with his sophisticated,bohemian,ironic style of earlier books that Kureshi would have developed into a more emotional version of the writer Nick Hornby would have liked to have been. Let`s start facing it, with Amis, Barnes, Self and Rushdie writing nothing about nothing, Kureshi is the most intriguing and talented writer we now have. Docked one star because the last twenty pages aren`t as brilliant as the rest, and the novel gets a little too `twee`. But a great fairy tale for modern kids with as usual excellent sense of place and time. It needed something gritty in there, some meat, but a success nonetheless. Also unlike other writers his work forms a body of work with motifs going all the way back to `Sammy and Rosie Got Laid` sprinkled through it all; it`s Kureishi`s usual characters moved on in years and from a new perspective.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A tale of how a boy's imagination helps his family, 23 Feb 2001
By A Customer
I really enjoyed Hanif Kureishi's new novel. It's a tale of imagination and how an older-than-his-years 15 year old, Gabriel, uses his talent for drawing and his penchant for imagination to come to grips with his parents' separation and eventually allows his estranged parents a new chance together. As usual, Kureishi creates characters who are full of life. He is able to show the disappointed failure of dad (Rex) and the frustrated despair of Mom (Christine), both of whom yearn for the past when they enjoyed moderate success in the music world. The pages where Gabriel draws strength from "imaginary" conversations with his deceased twin (Archie) are touching. Kureishi again demonstrates his talent for creating humor from ordinary situations. For example, Gabriel's manipulation of a clumpish au pair (Hannah) is clever and witty. Fans of Kureishi's earlier works will be pleased with the reference to DeeDee Osgood (from The Black Album) and the cameo appearances (with dialogue) of Buddha of Suburbia characters Karim Amir and Charlie Hero. Fans of Kureishi won't be able to put it down for the night. For others, it's a great first glimpse of his writing skills.
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