The Atlantic

Ali Smith’s <i>Autumn</i> Is a Post-Brexit Masterpiece

In a dazzling, abstract new novel, the Scottish author experiments with time, history, and art to respond to a tumultuous moment.
Source: Toby Melville / Reuters

What kind of art will come out of this moment? If Ali Smith’s Autumn is a harbinger of things to come, the work that emerges over the next decade will be extraordinarily rich. The novel, the first book in a quartet inspired by the seasons, considers post-Brexit Britain at the tail end of last summer, experienced through the perspective of a 32-year-old art history lecturer named Elisabeth. But its ambition and craft allude to—and cite—great works of literature, from  Brave New World to The Tempest. Through Smith’s dazzling, whimsical feats of imagination, a news cycle described by Elisabeth as “Thomas Hardy on speed” becomes the backdrop for a modernist interrogation of history.

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