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"Writers die twice," wrote Martin Amis, "once when the body dies, and once when the talent dies." In the case of Philip Larkin, it was decided that two deaths weren't enough. The dead bores attacked the poems as dead bores do: by trashing the dead man's reputation. When he went to the grave in 1985, Larkin was known by many people to be a great poet. Eight years later — after the publication of the first Collected Poems, the Selected Letters and the Life — Larkin was known by many more people to be a racist, a womaniser, a porn collector and a drunk. It was soon questioned whether Larkin wrote great poetry. Then it seemed irrelevant that he wrote poetry at all.

A few serious writers stood up for Larkin with sensible words. Martin Amis was one of those writers. Clive James was another. They said what mattered, and what still matters: that Larkin had talent, and that the man's private failures were a private affair, because the man chose to keep them that way. Amis was still defending Larkin in October. On Letters to Monica he wrote that "Larkin's life was a failure; his work was a triumph. That is all that matters. Because the work, unlike the life, lives on." In September, Faber will publish the Selected Poems of Philip Larkin. The poems are chosen by Martin Amis.

Many people who write about literature think that Martin Amis's talent is dead. That talent, apparently, fell terminally ill about the same time as Larkin's funeral: in the mid 1980s, after the publication of Money. One reviewer, writing in The Sunday Times in 2003, offered a neat summary of this popular opinion in the press. London Fields (1989) and The Information (1995) "threw into embarrassing relief the meagreness of his fictional repertoire". Einstein's Monsters (1987) and Heavy Water (1998) "showed that even the short story format couldn't curb his tendency to meander and repeat". "Two experimental novellas", Time's Arrow (1991) and Night Train (1997), "both proved ill-judged". In Koba the Dread (2002) Amis sounded "even more egotistical than he did in his autobiography, Experience [2000]". Yellow Dog (2003) "ends with a baby getting triumphantly up on to its feet. But the impression it leaves is of a talent on its last legs."

Clive James made an elegant point when he wrote that: "Literature says most things itself, when it is allowed to." Books, in liberal democracies, live or die over time on their own merits. The dead bores' criticisms simply don't matter to the literature. But they matter to how we talk about literature, which means —to borrow another elegant idea from Clive James — they matter to civilisation. There's something curious about a pack of dead bores trying to take down a living novelist. It's curious that they think nothing of doing it with dead boring prose. They should, because to write like a bore is to think like one.

True literary style is unique. It's a voice heard above the immense hum of printed words. For Nabokov, style was matter. For Amis, style is perception: "It's not the flashy twist, the abrupt climax, or the seamless sequence of events that characterises a writer and makes him unique. It's a tone, it's a way of looking at things." A unique voice on the page provokes a unique response. No two readers can react to a real prose style in the same way. Yet many literary journalists try to persuade us that that's exactly what happens when they read a new Martin Amis novel. The style they use to describe his work is almost always the same. There are, of course, occasional warm reviews. The Pregnant Widow, rereleased in March in a Vintage paperback edition, was briefly praised in the Guardian and The Independent recently. But it is true to say that there's a consensus on Amis's work that is wholly unrelated to the quality of his words. The tale of Amis's dead talent is so popular in the press nowadays that it's a cliché. The cliché is betrayed by the dead boring style adopted by many writers when they write about Amis.

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The Sanity Inspector
April 25th, 2011
10:04 PM
"Any reviewer who expresses rage and loathing for a novel is preposterous. He or she is like a person who has put on full armor and attacked a hot fudge sundae." -- Kurt Vonnegut "Some critics are like chimney-sweepers: they put out the fire below, or frighten the swallows from their nests above; they scrape a long time in the chimney, cover themselves with soot, and bring nothing away but a bag of cinders, and then sing from the top of the house as if they had built it." -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow "I might also say, regarding reviews and reviewers, that I have yet to read a review of any of my own books which I could not have written much better myself." ~ Edward Abbey

William Gazy
April 25th, 2011
8:04 PM
Bravo. Amis is in the cultural doghouse because he had the absolute damn cheek to say things that are true in an age sunk deep in cant. He has learned that you cannot criticise the cretinous sections of the Left and expect to have a career.

Anonymous
April 25th, 2011
6:04 PM
Spot on, Mr Barrett - Amis looks at this country with a clear and steady gaze - as did Larkin and that is really all that counts....but of course that conflicts directly with the fatal english disease - nostalgia. The english critics have never felt comfortable with writers who won't sweeten the view - Beckett got a rough time, as did Swift and even the writer who I think Mr Amis most echoes, Henry Fielding...same as it ever was...as for the boundless talent of the bores such as A.N. Wilson ( ever tried actually reading anything by this chap - I have - as Kenneth Williams commented in his final diary entry - "whats the bloody point ?") it should be left to squeak for itself. I wish Martin Amis well - hope he keeps writing about England and is able to comfort his old mate Mr Hitchens in his last days - come back soon - you won't be forgotten.

Martin Walker
April 25th, 2011
5:04 PM
The trouble is,Mr Barrett, you go on about the "dead bores" who dismiss Amis, of whom a leading named example is A.N. Wilson - who is perhaps a royalist nutter and whatever else but decidedly not boring, in fact he is one of the only entertaining and instructive book reviewers left in the UK. Your examples of Amis's "greatness" are also not convincing - and I pass over the boredom factor of your own critical prose...

Joel Posner
April 25th, 2011
10:04 AM
Good article. Amis is indeed a talented writer. He is at times also rather annoying. Histrionic at heart, with a paranoid and masochistic twist, he would always try to generate as much negative attention as possible to boost sales and to reaffirm his position as the eternal outsider and enfant terrible, the sorely misunderstood genius full of goodbyes to all that. But it would certainly be a loss for England if he settles in America.

Anonymous
April 25th, 2011
9:04 AM
God help Martin Amis if this is the best he can summon in the way of defenders. 'Dead bores'? The problem many readers have with Amis is the contradiction between the indifferent quality of his production for the last twenty-five years and his continuing presumption that he is an important - perhaps the most important - British writer. Moments of stylistic felicity don't excuse the poverty of his ideas, the narrowness of his range, or the pomposity of his public persona.

John
April 25th, 2011
6:04 AM
M. Amis, always overrated, lost whatever talent he had many years ago. I still stand by my opinion that in his case nepotism means something. If his papa wasn't kinsgley amis, M.A. would be a dead issue. Like the smooth writing, shallow thinker Christopher Hitchens, these Brits are best unread. Many other writers need readers, or rather the readers need the writers' work product. One thinks of Flannery O' Connor and William Faulkner and Tolstoy, WAr and Peace, not Anna Karenina. Also, keep reading Shak's plays till you really understand them, even if it means reading critics' explications. Much Ado About Nothing and King Lear surpass anything written by the authors listed above, except O'Connor. Tolstoy's over long and often boring W and P is worth reading, only if you have not read all of Dickens, some o Balzac, The Red and the Black, Moby Dick, most of Conrad and Homer's and Joyce's Ulysses. Also, many of modern writer William Trevor's short stories are worth reading before tackling W and P. Please not that The Possessed and Crime and Punishment are better novels than Brothers K. We live in a literary world where reviewers (actually acolytes) praise Francine Prose and ignore Evelyn WAugh. So much to read--don't waste your life on Proust, or more than 2 novels by Balzac. Trollope can be safely ignored and unread. There are many better poets than fiction writers. Read poetry, not just Shak. If you've never read shelley's Prometheus Unbound, Byron's Don Juan, all of keats's mature poetry, including especially The Eve of St. Agnes., then read Shelley, Keats, Tomlinson, Montague, and many other first rate poets--usually not confessional crap by Plath, Sexton, and Berryman. Read all of Spenser before taking the time to read Robertson DAvies, though dAvies is worth reading. And it's too bad, all things being equal, that Cormac McCarthy's adapted novel won an Oscar. He's the best novelist of the last 50 years of the 20th century. Make sure to read the mostly ignored first three "southern novels" and the masterpiece, Suttree. Also, the texture and imagery of All the Pretty Horses, also its characterization, plot and mind-blasting descriptions of the fight in the prison and the breaking of the horses--along with the descriptions of the amerian southwest bleeding over to northern Mexico. Blood Meridian is good, but the border trilogy and first four novels mentioned above will enlarge your way of seeing things and make you a better reader and in most cases a better person. Tom Jones should be read before all 20th century novels. If you go to college and take a Novel class or classes and the teacher doesn't assign something by Trevor or McCarthym then you must move on and drop the course immediately. Keats's poetry, tied for second with Milton, should be memorized. You don't have to memorize Shak., but you should have read all his plays at least 5 times, and viewed them in a theater as many times as possible. The Twelfth Night is bewitching and electric.

George Balanchinebut
April 25th, 2011
6:04 AM
Well, Amis is coming here to the US, the land of the creative writing MFA, where he'll be left alone, because in general, we don't pay attention to writers, but he'll also be in a country that takes Jonathen Franzen seriously, so how much will things really change for him in terms of "bores"? If he wanted things to be different, why didn't he just move to the French countryside? or better yet Majorca, like Robert Graves? Most likely, it's just a personal move because of his family, nothing else. And Zadie Smith saying writers follow, "...the truth of their own conception...", is true but...it's not a jejune phrase exactly, just very trite, which fits her exactly(not a fan). You do go on a bit about bores, though. Sincerely, George Balanchine

miasmadude
April 25th, 2011
6:04 AM
Yes, the writing is what matters, and, alas, Martin Amis is a really lousy writer. And further, Terry Eagleton is exactly right about both of them. The problem is that the personal nastiness of both Amis pere and fils seeps into everything they write or have written, leaving sour little squibs, instead of literature.

Anonymous
April 25th, 2011
4:04 AM
The article would have been more effective if the author had not indulged in ad hominem attacks on Amis's critics.

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