Two young people navigate their personal lives and social turmoil in Thatcher-era England.
When Daphne, the narrator of Smith’s debut novel, meets a new boy named Connie at the South London secondary school she attends, it isn’t exactly love at first sight. Connie, 12, has recently moved to England from Jamaica with his mother, Althea; Daphne, a London native with a Jamaican mother, isn’t quite sure what to make of him. But the two eventually become friends, and Connie tells Daphne that he and his mother are “nuh land”—in England illegally. Daphne’s mother, Alma, welcomes Connie, allowing him to spend time at their crowded house when Althea’s abusive partner, Tobias, is in a bad mood. Daphne helps Connie adjust to life in London, while dealing with a family problem of her own: She has tracked down her absent father, much to Alma’s chagrin. Meanwhile, both characters are forced to deal with racist taunts and attacks, and Daphne finds herself interested in a white boy with both a crush on her and a virulently racist brother. Smith’s novel covers 12 years in the lives of the two families, beginning in 1981, shortly after the New Cross house fire that killed 13 Black people and led to that year’s Brixton riot, continuing through 1985, when another riot rocked Brixton, and concluding in 1993. Smith does an amazing job detailing the atmosphere of Thatcher’s England and the immigrant experience, and her dialogue is pitch-perfect. Most impressive is the way she draws Daphne and Connie, both complex characters constantly looking for somewhere to fit in. The writing is top-notch, and the novel manages to be heartfelt but never sentimental. This is a major achievement from an author with talent to spare.
A moving, beautifully structured novel from an incredible new voice.