Hanif Kureshi: middle-aged wisdom The novelist's 'Something to Tell You' reflects his world view now that he's in his 50s. By Charles Taylor
NEW YORK -- "I turned 50 and realized I'd been around for ages." That's Hanif Kureishi, novelist and screenwriter ("My Beautiful Laundrette," "Venus"), talking about the panorama of his latest book, "Something to Tell You."
"I could remember the '60s, and indeed the '50s, as well as the '70s and '80s . . .," Kureishi tells me during a conversation in the offices of his publisher, Scribner. "So I wanted to do something a bit bigger. You meet these people when you're 20 and somehow, when you're 53, you still know them. You can see their lives."
"I could remember the '60s, and indeed the '50s, as well as the '70s and '80s . . .," Kureishi tells me during a conversation in the offices of his publisher, Scribner. "So I wanted to do something a bit bigger. You meet these people when you're 20 and somehow, when you're 53, you still know them. You can see their lives."
Like the narrators of those books, Jamal, the middle-aged shrink who presides over "Something," finds himself amid all sorts of unlikely collections as he navigates London's racial, sexual and class barriers. Jamal's sister, Miriam, makes a living dealing in smuggled electronic equipment and maintains a profile as a fixture on daytime talk shows as the embodiment of whatever social problem or neurosis she can represent. In short order, she becomes the lover of Jamal's friend Henry, a theater and opera director, and the two are heading off to nights at London's swing clubs. The brother of Jamal's lost teenage love turns up as an acclaimed gay pop star whom Jamal meets at a Rolling Stones concert and Jamal is soon admitted into the presence of their doddering majesties.
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