![]() ![]() And yet so frantic were the headlines of 2020, so febrile the global temperature, I began to wonder if there was too much reality even for this supremely subtle and supple writer. She says: yes there’s Brexit, but here are deep shared ties of history and culture yes there’s indefinite detention and the climate crisis, but here are people willing to lose their freedom, even their lives, to protest against them yes there’s loss and loneliness, but here are small moments of connection, of recognition, of dignity. She says: things are bad, life is complicated but here are Chaplin’s films and Pauline Boty’s paintings, here is Tacita Dean and Barbara Hepworth, here is Shakespeare and Dickens and Katherine Mansfield. Smith’s series has become a central part of my cultural life, one of the tools with which I attempt to read the moment, both a framing device and a lesson in defence against the dark arts. With the Booker-shortlisted Autumn published in October 2016, Winter in November 2017, Springin March 2019, and now Summer, the four books are both independent novels and work together as a complex, interrelated collage of reflections on the way we live now. ![]() ![]() A vast and dizzyingly ambitious project – each book is written and published in just a few months – the novels seek to be as up to date as it is possible for literature to be. This is the final instalment of her seasonal quartet, a series that has already been celebrated by reviewers and readers alike. I ’m not sure I’ve ever looked forward to a book as eagerly as Ali Smith’s Summer. ![]()
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