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Hanif Kureishi - Gabriel's Gift

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Hanif Kureishi Gabriel's Gift
  • Book:
    Gabriel's Gift
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  • Publisher:
    Faber & Faber
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  • Year:
    2001
  • ISBN:
    9780571249428
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    5 / 5
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The protagonist of this novel is a 15-year-old North London schoolboy called Gabriel. He is forced to come to terms with a new life, and use his gift for painting in order to make sense of his world, once the equilibrium of the family has been shattered by his fathers departure.

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Hanif Kureishi

Gabriel's Gift

For Kier

Chapter One

School how was, today?

Learning makes me feel ignorant, said Gabriel. Has Dad rung?

As well as the fact he didnt know where his father was, something strange was happening to the weather in Gabriels neighbourhood. That morning, when he left for school with Hannah, there was a light spring shower, and it was autumn.

By the time they had reached the school gates, a layer of snow sat on their hats. At lunch-time in the playground, the hot floodlight of the sun suddenly illuminated like a lamp had been so bright the kids played in shirtsleeves.

In the late afternoon, when he and Hannah were hurrying home along the edge of the park, Gabriel became certain that the leaves in the park were being plucked from the ground and fluttered back to the trees from which they had fallen, before turning green again.

From the corner of his eye, Gabriel noticed something even odder.

A row of daffodils were lifting their heads and dropping them like bowing ballerinas at the end of a performance. When one of them winked, Gabriel looked around before gripping Hannahs hairy hand, something he had always been reluctant to do, particularly if a friend might see him. But today was different: the world was losing its mind.

Has he been in touch? Gabriel asked.

Hannah was the foreign au pair.

Who? she said.

My father.

Certainly no. Gone away! Gone!

Gabriels father had left home, at Mums instigation, three months ago. Unusually, it had been several days since he had phoned, and at least two weeks since Gabriel had seen him.

Gabriel determined that as soon as they got back he would make a drawing of the winking daffodil, to remind him to tell his father about it. Dad loved to sing, or recite poetry. Fair daffodils, we weep to see / You haste away so soon he would chant as they walked.

For Dad the shops, pavements and people were alive like nature, though with more human interest, and as ever-changing as trees, water or the sky.

In contrast, Hannah looked straight ahead, as if she were walking in a cupboard. She understood little English and when Gabriel spoke to her she grimaced and frowned like someone trying to swallow an ashtray. Perhaps they were both amazed that a kid spoke better English than she did.

Although Gabriel was fifteen, until recently his father had usually walked him home from school in order to keep him away from any possible temptations and diversions. Not long ago Dad had had to rescue Gabriel from a dangerous scene in a nearby block of flats. Fortunately Dad was a musician and often had spare time during the day; too much spare time, said Gabriels mother, who had started to find Rex himself somewhat spare. Going to the school had been the only structure Dad had, apart from his daily visits to the pub, where several of the other parents also considered the world through the bottom of a beer glass.

Gabriel and his father often stopped at cafs and record shops. Or they went to collect the photographs Gabriel had taken recently, which were developed by a friend of Dads who had a dark-room. In the sixties and seventies this man had been a successful fashion and pop photographer. The girls with ironed hair and boys in military jackets he had immortalized, as he liked to put it, were as distant to Gabriel as Dickenss characters. The man was out of fashion himself and rarely worked; however, he liked to talk about photography, and he lent Gabriel many books and tore pictures from newspapers, explaining what the photographer had tried to do.

Dad liked to say that school was the last place where anyone could get an education. But outside, if your eyes were open, there were teachers everywhere. All that Dad recalled from his own school-days was something about wattle and daub, freezing swimming pools at nine in the morning, and the rate of glacier movement, which was well, he couldnt remember.

Getting home was a protracted business for Gabriel and his father. Planting his legs wide on the pavement and swinging his hand for illustration, Dad would ask the most intimate questions of people he knew only vaguely How much do you drink? Do you still go to bed together? Do you love her? which, to Gabriels amazement, the person not only answered but elaborated on, often interminably, as Gabriels father nodded and listened. The two of them would discuss the results for the rest of the way home.

Now Dad had gone and was living somewhere else. If the world hadnt quite been turned upside down, it was at an unusual and perilous angle, and certainly not still.

Since Dads departure, Gabriels mother insisted that Hannah pick Gabriel up. Mum didnt want to worry about him more than she already did.

Today, as Gabriel and Hannah rushed on, there was a sound behind them: it was either a giant clapping in their ears, or thunder. Going up the front path, a cloud of fog and hail descended and they couldnt see in front of them. Gabriel tripped on the step, but luckily Hannah was ahead of him. At least she guaranteed a soft landing.

When Gabriel returned from school these days, the house almost echoed. Neither of his noisy, quarrelsome parents came to the door. Normally he, Mum and Dad would have Earl Grey in a pot, crumpets soggy with butter I love a bit of crumpet in the afternoon, Dad would always say, a remark that could only have hastened his departure and cakes; they loved anything involving cream and chocolate.

What had happened was this.

One evening, three months ago, Gabriel had looked out of the living-room window and seen his father packing his clothes and guitars into the back of a friends van. Dad returned to the house, kissed his son, and waved at him from the street.

Gabriel had run to the gate. Where are you going?

Away, said Dad. For a time.

On tour?

Im afraid not.

On holiday?

No. No

Where then?

Gabriel

Is it my er, bad behaviour, that has caused this?

Could be Oh, dont be stupid.

In a hurry to get away, and not wanting to talk, his father had stood there with his oldest guitar under one arm and a shaving bag, briefcase and trumpet under the other. For some reason he had a camera round his neck, as well as a bag out of which shirts were tumbling; his pockets were packed with underpants and socks; planted on his head were several woolly hats.

Go inside, he said. Keep warm.

When are you coming back?

I will explain everything later, he said, as he always did when he intended to say nothing.

Dont go. Gabriel took his hand. Stay a bit longer. I wont interrupt when youre talking for a long time.

His father had pulled away. Ive got to get out. Its what your mother wants. Will you pick up those socks for me? You know I cant bend over.

Gabriel had stuffed the fallen socks into his fathers top pocket. Dad climbed into the van.

As it started to draw away, Mum had raced from the house and flung at the van, with hysterical strength, a forgotten pair of Dads boots which the car behind ran over, crushing them. When the van stopped and Dad climbed down to pick up his useless flattened footwear, Gabriel wondered whether his father might return to the house.

My favourite part of that man is his back. Mum had said, slamming the door. But what will happen now, I dont know. You never stop eating and wanting!

Me? he said. This was normally how she talked to Dad.

We havent got any money! she said.

Well have to earn some.

What a good idea. When are you going to start work? She looked at him properly. In lots of ways youre still a little kid but actually youre big enough. But I wouldnt want you to put up with what Ive been through.

The rumble and whirr of his mothers sewing machine had been the soundtrack to Gabriels childhood. She had started off, in a more glamorous time, by making party clothes for her young, fab friends in the music business, and then for the bands, their managers and groupies. Mum had done it as a favour and because she liked to please. Had she been a designer like her heroine Vivienne Westwood, she might have progressed.

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