Zadie Smith Reading, part of the Lane Lecture Series

Date
Mon November 8th 2021, 3:00 - 4:00pm
Event Sponsor
Creative Writing Program
Location
Bechtel Conference Center
Zadie Smith Reading, part of the Lane Lecture Series

Photo by Dominique Nabakov.

Part of the Lane Lecture Series. Registration and Stanford ID required. Seating is limited. Masks will be required.

Note: Zadie Smith will not sign books after the reading but pre-signed copies will be available for purchase.

Novelist Zadie Smith was born in North London in 1975 to an English father and a Jamaican mother. She read English at Cambridge, before graduating in 1997.

Her acclaimed first novel, White Teeth (2000), is a vibrant portrait of contemporary multicultural London, told through the stories of three ethnically diverse families. The book won a number of awards and prizes, including the Guardian First Book Award, the Whitbread First Novel Award, the Commonwealth Writers Prize (Overall Winner, Best First Book), and two BT Ethnic and Multicultural Media Awards (Best Book/Novel and Best Female Media Newcomer). It was also shortlisted for the Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Author's Club First Novel Award. White Teeth has been translated into over twenty languages and was adapted for Channel 4 television for broadcast in autumn 2002, and for the stage in November 2018. In 2020 the New York Public Library voted White Teeth one of the 125 most important books of the last 125 years.

Zadie Smith's The Autograph Man (2002), a story of loss, obsession and the nature of celebrity, won the 2003 Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prize for Fiction. In 2003 and 2013 she was named by Granta magazine as one of 20 'Best of Young British Novelists'. On Beauty won the 2006 Orange Prize for Fiction and her novel NW was shortlisted for the Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize and the Women’s Prize for Fiction and was named as one of The New York Times 10 Best Books of 2012. NW was also made into a television film by the BBC in 2016. Her novel Swing Time was a New York Times bestseller. She has published three collections of essays, Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays (2009), Feel Free (2018) and Intimations which was chosen as one of Oprah's Best Books of 2020. Her collection of short stories, Grand Union, was longlisted for the Carnegie Medal. Her play, The Wife of Willesden, based on Chaucer’s The Wife of Bath’s Tale will premiere at the Kiln Theatre. In 2021 she co-wrote a children's book with Nick Laird titled Weirdo, with illustrations by Magenta Fox. She is currently working on a new novel.   

Zadie Smith writes regularly for The New Yorker and the New York Review of Books.  In 2017 she was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts & Letters, and received the 2017 City College of New York’s Langston Hughes Medal. She is also the recipient of the 2021 St. Louis Literary Award. Zadie Smith is currently a tenured professor of Creative Writing at New York University.

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