How to Be Both

How to Be Both

First Edition cover, featuring photograph of Sylvie Vartan and Françoise Hardy by Jean-Marie Périer.
The photograph is mentioned in the novel, George being likened to the image of Sylvie Vartan.
Author Ali Smith
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Hamish Hamilton
Publication date
August 2014
Media type Print
Pages 372
ISBN 978-0375424106

How to Be Both is a 2014 novel by Scottish author Ali Smith, first published by Hamish Hamilton.[1] It was shortlisted for the 2014 Man Booker Prize[2] and the 2015 Folio Prize.[3] It won the 2014 Goldsmiths Prize,[4][5] the Novel Award in the 2014 Costa Book Awards and the 2015 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction.[6]

Plot introduction

The story is told from two perspectives: those of George, a pedantic 16-year-old girl living in contemporary Cambridge, and Francesco del Cossa, an Italian renaissance artist responsible for painting a series of frescoes in the 'Hall of the Months' at the Palazzo Schifanoia (translated as the 'Palace of Not Being Bored' in the novel) in Ferrara, Italy. Two versions of the book were published simultaneously, one in which George's story appears first, the other in which Francesco's comes first.[7]

George

Struggling to come to terms with the sudden death of her mother (Carol Martineau – Economist, Journalist, Internet Guerilla), George attends counselling sessions at her school. She also has to look after her younger brother and cope with her alcoholic father. She recalls travelling with her mother to see the Frescos in Ferrara and asking her about the elusive painter Francesco del Cossa. Her Mother believed herself to be being monitored by the security services as a result of her subversive activities and George has inherited this belief, and becomes obsessed with Lisa Goliard a friend of her mother's with a suspicious claim to be an artist. George also becomes obsessed with Francesco and travels frequently to London to view his portrait of St. Vincent Ferrer.

Francesco

Francesco finds his disembodied self in front of his portrait of St. Vincent Ferrer as it is being examined by a boy. He muses on how he came to find himself in this situation, thinking back to the events in his past life and as he becomes attached to the boy, but people—and genders—are never what they seem to be. Or maybe they are both.

Reception

Reviews were positive :

External links

References

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