There But For The by Ali Smith
Hamish Hamilton $32
There is usually a moment in an Ali Smith story when I ask myself "where can this strangest of beginnings lead?" and another moment when I think "why is half of this chapter written in parenthesis?"
Then there are moments when the book stops me in my tracks with its glittering imagination and warmth, moments when I laugh out loud and penny-dropping moments when I turn a page and my eyes fill up.
It happened with Hotel World, The Accidental, and even in the few pages it takes Smith to tell her bizarre, bittersweet short stories. So it happened in There But For The, which has, as usual, a deceptively whimsical scenario as its dramatic pivot: a man - Miles Garth - attends a dinner party and just before the creme brulee is served, he goes upstairs and barricades himself indefinitely in the host's spare room. "I am only relieved the bedroom is ensuite," says Genevieve Lee, whose bourgeois existence is punctured by the impostor ensconced in her immaculate Greenwich home.
The fascination with language - a central preoccupation in almost all of Smith's stories - is evident here, and much of the playfulness and punning is left to a precocious 9-year-old girl called Brooke. Some might find this linguistic tomfoolery tiring, yet it is more than simple word play. The semantic and structural disruption, starting with the novel's unfinished title, reflects its anarchic intent - to disrupt the comfortably smug, middle-class sensibility personified by Genevieve and her dinner party set, with their stultifying prejudice and snobbery.