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The White Family
2002 novel by Maggie Gee From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The White Family is a novel by English author Maggie Gee, published in 2002 in London by Saqi Books. It was shortlisted for both the 2003 Orange Prize[1] and the 2004 International Dublin Literary Award.[2]
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Plot introduction
It is set in Hillesden, a thinly disguised Willesden[3][4] in north-west London. Alfred White, a park keeper, collapses while on duty, and his family gather round his hospital bed and reflect on issues of love, hatred, sex and death.[5]
Reception
- Maya Jaggi in The Guardian writes: "An audacious, groundbreaking condition-of-England novel that delves for the roots of xenophobic hatred and violence in the English hearth" and concludes, "The White Family is finely judged and compulsively readable. Its head-on scrutiny of the uglier face of fair Albion is the more impressive for its rarity in British fiction."[6]
- Hephzibah Anderson in The Observer is more critical: "Gee is unflinching in her exploration of the causes and consequences of racism, but too often she delves beneath the skin of her archetypes to come up with near stereotypes, and for all that it aims at up-to-the-minute, the book remains curiously, naïvely dated. As White Teeth, that other multi-cultural Brent novel, showed, today's racial landscape is coloured less in blacks and whites than myriad shades of grey."[7]
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Sequel
Characters in The White Family appear in Gee's 2004 novel The Flood, set in an unspecified future date.[8]
References
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