"[ The Fraud ] offers a vast, acute panoply of London and the English countryside, and successfully locates the social controversies of an era in a handful of characters. In all of her books Smith has paid attention to a mixed-up London and particularly to Willesden, where she grew up. In this novel, she is quite actively digging into London''s history, trying to understand how a person like her, with European and Jamaican ancestry, came to exist here in the first place. What forces deposited Black people on these shores? With her multicultural eye she also gives us a London that is more racially mixed than that found in other novels about the period. As always, it is a pleasure to be in Zadie Smith''s mind, which, as time goes on, is becoming contiguous with London itself. Dickens may be dead, but Smith, thankfully, is alive." -- Karan Mahajan, The New York Times Book Review " The Fraud , [Smith''s] sixth novel, is partly about an enslaved man on a Jamaican sugar plantation, and it''s a comedy: those two things at once. Few would dare; fewer could pull it off as Smith does here, mixing narrative delight with a vein of rapid, skimming satire as she sketches scenes of life in 19th-century England and the Caribbean .
In all this multiplicity, different models of Victorian fiction are inherited and transformed . The Fraud is a curious combination of gloriously light, deft writing and strenuous construction . It slows and expands lavishly in honour of its Victorian subjects, yet its chapters are elliptical half-scenes chosen with modernist economy. Happily its eight ''volumes'' can be bound with one spine. Here is historical fiction with all the day-lit attentiveness that Eliza hopes for: ''stories of human beings, struggling, suffering, deluding others and themselves, being cruel to each other and kind. Usually both.'' Generous and undogmatic as ever, Smith makes room for ''both''." -- Alexandra Harris, The Guardian "Smith has long been fascinated by, and is expertly attuned to, the authority and status conferred on those who can wield language entertainingly or persuasively.
This is the novelist''s prowess--and the politician''s and the swindler''s. Over and over, The Fraud insists on the duty of the novelist to deeply imagine the other--a project that may be doomed to fail but remains worth attempting. Smith was a convincing mouthpiece for this argument in The New York Review of Books not simply because she''s a persuasive critic but because she has made a career writing novels that do this well." -- Jordan Kisner, The Atlantic "Smith''s characteristically expansive new novel, The Fraud , works by indirection . Some of what The Fraud says about our own time is troubling and meant to be so. But Smith is never solemn . Her curiosity seems endless, she''s willing to let the past surprise her, and though the book doesn''t offer a new form of historical fiction, I would bet that it does represent a new moment in the career of Zadie Smith." --Michael Gorra, The New York Review of Books "The best and most poignant sections of The Fraud examine the highly prescribed space for a sharp, smart woman in a culture that has no interest in sharp, smart women, particularly a dependent one of a certain age with little money.
Eliza cannot be honest about her cousin''s novels; she cannot be open about her sexuality; she cannot pursue her own interest in writing . As ever, Smith continually works against expectations . [ The Fraud ] excels at sleight of hand. The syncopated arrangement of these short chapters jumps back and forth in time, placing Ainsworth''s youthful popularity in contrast to his later years of panicked self-doubt. But the focus remains on the mysterious Eliza Touchet -- so externally polite, so internally acute -- struggling till the end of her life to divine what to believe when the human condition is essentially fraudulent." -- Ron Charles, The Washington Post "[A] great success. Certainly it''s my favorite of this writer''s novels. Ms.
Smith has always been superb at conjuring voices (in this she is more like Dickens than she might prefer), and the scenes come to life in whirlwinds of dialogue that hurl together working-class cant, Caribbean patois and Queen''s English. Though The Fraud is capacious, its chapters are short, vivid and contained.For perhaps the first time since her 2000 debut, White Teeth , Ms. Smith has allowed herself the freedom to be brilliant, without giving equal time to the dutiful rebuttals of guilt and misgiving." -- Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal "Along with Smith''s signature wry wit and the beautiful originality of her sentences, The Fraud ''s strength lies in how it portrays Eliza''s awakening to the realities of race in 19th-century Britain. The Fraud is absorbing, resonant and relevant." -- The Boston Globe "[A] brilliant new entry in Smith''s catalog . The Fraud is not a change for Smith, but a demonstration of how expansive her talents are.
" -- Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times "This kaleidoscopic novel revolves around the real-life trial of a man who, in late-nineteenth-century London, claimed to be the heir to a fortune . The sprawling story is filled with jabs at the hypocrisy of the upper class, characters who doubt institutions, and corollaries of the pugilistic rhetoric of contemporary populism; with characteristic brilliance, Smith makes the many parts of the tale cohere." -- The New Yorker "Zadie Smith is a gifted storyteller and prose stylist. And The Fraud makes a compelling case that historical fiction can lie to tell the truth." -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "When [Zadie Smith] she burst onto the scene at 24 with White Teeth , her bestselling debut published in 2000, Ms Smith earned comparisons to Charles Dickens.perhaps it was only a matter of time before she would write a historical novel after all. [ The Fraud ] is based on a real court battle in 1873, in which a seemingly uneducated butcher from east London claimed to be Sir Roger Tichborne, the presumed-drowned heir to a grand estate. The Fraud leaps from stuffy English parlours to Jamaican sugar plantations, where African slaves lost their names, their loves and often their lives while toiling for the British.
The effect is potent, as Ms Smith--a child of a white father and Jamaican mother--considers a worse fraud than a butcher''s claim to wealth. Beneath the sweetened tea of polite society was a hellscape of inhumanity." -- The Economist "2023 has been a remarkable year for literature for many reasons, including the long-awaited return of Zadie Smith. Based on real historical events, The Fraud is a captivating look into the fraudulent and the authentic." -- Chicago Review of Books "Fans will find much they recognise in her tremendous new novel . After a while, you realise that The Fraud isn''t Smith''s first historical novel. It is her first prequel: a book that provides the pre-history of both the world and the neighbourhood that she first brought to life in White Teeth with a divorced war veteran trying, unsuccessfully, to gas himself opposite an Indian restaurant on New Year''s Eve in 1975. Just like White Teeth, The Fraud is a novel that illuminates what it is to live and to love in the 21st century.
" -- Stephen Bush, Financial Times "Zadie Smith''s The Fraud is a lot of things: a meticulously researched work of historical fiction, a smart narrative about the importance of truth and the shortcomings of perspective, and a tale that delves deeply into authenticity and justice . Smith''s knack for developing full secondary characters and her talent for descriptions and witty dialogue make some parts of this novel as entertaining as the wildest fiction . The Fraud matters because it unearths stories that need to be told, and because it asks a lot of important questions in both the unearthing and the telling. This is a novel packed with great writing and shining passages that go from humorous to deeply philosophical." --NPR "This whip-smart historical novel follows the 1873 Tichborne trial from the perspective of Eliza Touchet, an uncompromising housemaid whose purpose on earth is to discover the truth behind headlines. Who stands in her way? Self-aggrandizing men, literary friends of her cousin by marriage, and good old-fashioned polite society. Documenting both intimate family scenes and true events, Smith tells a crackling story of hubris, justice, and storytelling itself." --Oprah Daily "My favorite of Smith''s work .
The Fraud is a deeply researched historical novel, a first for Smith and one that she resisted mightily, but the characters are vividly rendered and distressingly familiar . Smith has once again proved that she''s a writer willing to challenge herself as she navigates complicated character dynamics and the heavy weight of history--all with a keen sense of humor." --Shondaland "It is in [Smith''s] openness to and her endless curiosity about other people, even the ones she disagrees with, that her power lies. The Fraud . feels free in a way Smith''s novels haven''t in a long time, as if she is once again wandering a path of her own choosing, shaped by her own unhindered desires. Think of it as an instruction manual for how to read our fellow human beings, and also how to read Zadie Smith: Always prepare f.