The Review of Contemporary Fiction
Like by Ali SmithMichelle Latiolais
Ali Smith. Like. Virago (London), 1997. 343 pp. £12.99.
The first 150 pages of Like are captivating because at their narrative center is an eight-year-old girl by the name of Kate whose bemused and intelligent curiosity about both the natural and civilized world around her commands our respect, even our affection. She is reminiscent in a marvelous way of Colettes Bel-Gazou, and one is happy to inspect figuratively the insides of this childs pockets, to listen in on her taxonomic musings of the world. As we read on we understand that a mystery is also at the center of these pages, one which perhaps doesnt rivet Kate quite so much as it does the reader. Why is Kates mother, Amy, incapable of reading and why does she upon seeing a picture of an erupting Vesuvius suddenly begin to regain not only her past, but her skills to read?
Narrative convention promises us we will find out the answers to these questionsand othersand in various intriguing movements in the key of flouting conventions we do. In the remaining two hundred pages of the novel the answers come not alongside Kate but rather in the voice of a character heretofore mentioned only teasingly, her mothers would-be inamorata, a young Scottish woman by the name of Aisling, or Ash, who has made it as a movie star, perhaps a lesbian porn star.
I cant figure out whether it was a bold move against the conventions of fiction or some failure of nerve on the part of the author to maintain a young girl as the central character in a longish novel ostensibly about the great to-ings and fro-ings of fates which then, by way of trickle-down, inform hers. But Im not only never distracted from my interest in Kate by the novels remaining two hundred pages in Ashs voice, my interest is also never satisfied by a return in the narrative to Kates life.
Its all very sophisticated in a theoretical way, so very modern, and I admire the writing and the abilities of Ali Smith to create tremendous characters. If my interest in the novel eddied solely within the well of the intellect, then I think Id have few reservations, but Ali Smith writes a better book than that, dramatizes a far more complicated emotional world; I was sorry a certain structural insistence disallowed connections less cerebral. Still, her work certainly deserves reading. [Michelle Latiolais]