| Novelist
Zadie Smith Will Visit Milton |
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December 8, 2003
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Zadie Smith, one of Britain's most talented young
novelists, will visit Milton Academy on December 10 as part of the
Bingham Lecture Series.
At the age of 21, while a senior at Cambridge University, Zadie
Smith wrote her first novel, White Teeth. Described by many as an
inspiring novel full of humor and empathy, the first 100 pages of
her manuscript earned Zadie representation from the prestigious
Andrew Wylie Agency and ultimately Penguin Press bought the novel
in a frenzied auction.
White Teeth, a tale that spans 25 years of two families' assimilation
in North London, has won awards for Best Book and Best Female Newcomer
at the BT Emma Awards (Ethnic and Multicultural Media Awards), the
Guardian First Book Award, the Whitbread Prize for a first novel
in 2000, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction 2000, the
W.H. Smith Book Award for New Talent, the Frankfurt eBook Award
for Best Fiction Work Originally Published in 2000 and both the
Commonwealth Writers First Book Award and Overall Commonwealth Writers
Prize.
Smith's second novel, The Autograph Man, the tale of Alex-Li Tandem,
a Chinese-Jewish North Londoner whose trading in celebrity autographs
begins his own personal journey to enlightenment, proves that the
success of her first novel was not beginner's luck.
Zadie Smith is currently participating in a postgraduate course
on the Modern European Novel at Harvard University.
Established in 1987 by the Bingham Family, Barry, Edith and Emily
'83, the Bingham Lecture series brings writers, historians and journalists
to speak and work with students and faculty at Milton each year.

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