Zadie Smith has called On Beauty an “homage” to E.M. Forster’s Howards End, though not in a plot-by-plot sense.
Zadie Smith has used Forster’s structure as “scaffolding” – as a way to learn to write an English novel, something that made her feel like she’d earned legitimacy in the novel writing tradition. Consider this: by 2005, Smith was in her late twenties, already famous for White Teeth, and spending time at Harvard as a Radcliffe Institute fellow. Someone like that needed legitimacy as an author? Talk about impostor syndrome. She did mention in an interview that she overcompensated.

Anyway, it was fertile ground for her. The heady mix of American liberalism and conservatism, academia’s love of debate, and the way both sides could feel utterly sure of their own virtue. This was her study of what happens when ideals meet the mess of actual life.
The Belseys, liberal, chaotic, interracial, live in a house full of half-finished arguments about race, art, and politics. The Kippses, conservative, upright, pride themselves on moral clarity. But in On Beauty, no position is immune to human contradiction. Howard Belsey’s habit of dismantling beauty in theory while failing to notice it in his marriage is hypocrisy 2.0.
Smith has said she wanted to make a novel big enough to hold everything she cared about: Rembrandt, hip-hop, identity politics, generational change. That meant moving beyond the old moral inheritances of Forster’s England to the pluralism and the mess of 21st-century life. She was living part of the year in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and married to an academic. She was watching two Americas at once – liberal and conservative – each convinced it had the moral high ground.

There was also a personal reason. On Beauty, she’s said, is a “marriage novel.” Not a romance, but a long view: a relationship midstream, with its compromises, silences, and private codes.
Love stories stop at the altar; marriage novels keep going, through the laundry and the late-night arguments. For Smith, marriage is where all the grand ideas – about freedom, equality, beauty – get tested daily, often in ways no manifesto can anticipate.
Critics have noted that On Beauty never delivers the “moral clarity” ending. No neat redemption arcs, no definitive winners. That’s deliberate. No point punishing characters into growth (as I learn while writing my own book). But see where they go when they fail. That’s the fun and also the reality.
So, if you are looking for a novel that takes a realistic look at ideals (easier to lecture on than to live), maybe this could be your next read. Stay tuned to the reading chair for more recommendations!









