cover image Extravagant Strangers

Extravagant Strangers

. Vintage Books USA, $16.95 (338pp) ISBN 978-0-679-78154-7

This engaging, disturbing anthology collects short pieces, primarily fiction, but also prose and poetry, by British writers not born in Britain. Editor Phillips (The Nature of Blood) has an agenda: to illustrate that ""Britain has been forged in the crucible of fusion--of hybridity,"" that is, by the intersection of various cultures. While some of the included writers are well known for origins outside of Great Britain (Joseph Conrad, V.S. Naipaul, Salman Rushdie, Jean Rhys and Kazuo Ishiguro), others (William Thackeray, T.S. Eliot, George Orwell and Doris Lessing) aren't automatically thought of as being born away from the Blessed Isle. Alongside such luminaries are many obscure but worthy scribes, like 18th-century ex-slave Ignatius Sancho, early 20th-century Trindadian cultural critic C.L.R. James and contemporary fiction writers Christopher Hope, Timothy Mo, Romesh Gunesekera and Ben Okri. Despite the subtitle, most of the pieces deal with the sense of apartness, of difference, rather than of belonging. Sancho writes a letter to Laurence Sterne, asking the most popular novelist of his day to use his pen to strike a blow against slavery. George Orwell reports firsthand on how the poor are despised and mistreated. Fascinating throughout, the collection documents both the ways--from enslavement to racism to mere social snobbery--that certain groups have been treated as outcasts, and the ingenious, imaginative and often troubling responses writers have found to this exclusion. (Jan.)