Backlisted - The Information by Martin Amis
Episode Date: March 21, 2016Kill Your Friends author John Niven joins John, Andy & Mathew in the pod to discuss The information by Martin Amis, on the way answering the question 'if this book were a Britpop album, which Britpop ...album would it be?' This may or may not become a regular feature. There's also talk on how writers write, and the epoch defining moment when Andy met a punk rock legend. Timings: (may differ due to adverts)2'37 - The Devasting Boys by Elizabeth Taylor 6'37 - Daily Rituals by Mason Currey 13:06 - The Information by Martin Amis* To purchase any of the books mentioned in this episode please visit our bookshop at uk.bookshop.org/shop/backlisted where all profits help to sustain this podcast and UK independent bookshops.* For information about everything mentioned in this episode visit www.backlisted.fm*If you'd like to support the show, listen without adverts, receive the show early and with extra bonus fortnightly episodes, become a Patreon at www.patreon.com/backlisted Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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See Home Club for details. summer 1986 30 years ago i lived near croydon that's where i grew up and i've been to croydon
i bought a couple of records and i've with a record that i the album that i bought was a copy
of fables of the reconstruction by rem i was walking back to my house down our long, very leafy suburban road.
It was a really hot day.
And in the distance, no one around in the distance,
there's a man walking towards me dressed in black leather.
I was thinking, that's what I need to get out of this weather.
And I get closer.
I said, blimey, that bloke looks like Joe Strummer.
In our road.
And he gets in.
It is Joe Strummer.
I think, oh, my God, it's Joe Strummer. I think, oh my God,
it's Joe Strummer in the street.
I can't just pretend.
What am I going to say?
What am I going to say?
And as he went past,
he went, all right, Joe.
And he went, all right, mate.
That was that.
That was it.
Our last history was made.
I don't know why he was there.
Surely you didn't go,
what are you doing here? No, I should have done,
now I would do.
In suburban Croydon.
Come and have a cup of tea with my mum.
No, I missed my chance.
Man, that's a real time.
Yeah.
Hello and welcome to Backlisted.
Today we're gathered in the library of our sponsors unbanned,
the publishers who bring authors and readers together
to create great things to read.
I'm John Mitchinson, runner-up of Corduroy Wearer of the Year 1987,
Corduroy King of Cloths, Cloth of Kings.
Hello everyone, I'm Andy Miller, I'm the author of The Year of Reading Dangerously, and also,
I don't normally say this, but there's a reason for doing so, I'm also the author of the book
in the 33 and a third series of books about albums, of a book about the kinks of the Village
Green Preservation Society.
What an amazing coincidence.
There's a reason why I mention that.
Why is that?
Guest, John Niven.
Well, I am guest, John Niven,
author of novels like Kill Your Friends,
and also a novel called Music from Big Pink,
which is my fourth novel, in 2005, four or five,
which was published in the same series as Andy's book.
So we are label mates.
Yeah, I should say this is our guest today is John Niven,
who is here to talk about the information by Martin Amis.
John, of course, known as a novelist.
How many novels now? Six, seven novels.
The latest being The Sunshine Cruise Company.
And we're also joined, as usual, by the author and fundraiser, Matthew Clayton.
Hello, Matthew.
Hello, everyone.
We'll be talking about Martin Amis, as I said later,
but I have to start, as always, with the question of all questions.
Andy, what haven't you been reading this week?
What haven't I been reading this week?
I've been reading a book of short stories by the British writer Elizabeth Taylor,
a book called The Devastating Boys.
And I'm going to say a little bit about that,
but I'm not going to say loads about it
because I'm hoping we're going to do Elizabeth Taylor
on a future episode of the podcast.
But this was a book of short stories that was published,
I think, in the early 1970s.
And I read one of
Elizabeth Taylor's novels before, Angel
I just thought this was the most brilliant
collection of short stories that I've read since
Tigers Are Better Looking by
Jean Rees. There's a story
in there called, an amazing story
called In and Out of the Houses
which is about ten pages long
where a little girl
during her school holidays goes from house to house in her village,
inadvertently carrying the most terrible gossip between each house.
Like sort of a virus.
Yeah, in the course of the summer.
And in the course of the summer, the village falls apart
and turns in on itself.
It's so beautifully done.
What a great idea.
And there's a really horrible story called The Flypaper,
which is like something from
Tales of the Unexpected. And there's
another amazing story
called The Excursion to the Source.
It's almost a novella.
And it's a perfect collection of short stories
because it has that thing.
Every story is different and yet each
has a clear voice. They're all
clearly written by the same author. And I've also
just been reading, in comparison,
The Devastating Boys.
What a band name, that one.
But I've also been reading
a volume of John Cheever's
short stories called The Brigadier and the Golf Widow
and I like the Elizabeth Taylor more.
I mean, the Cheever stories are obviously
brilliant.
The thing with Cheever is, it strikes me,
you have to buy into the voice.
They're all written in a particular register.
And as a result,
some are better than others
and some are quite samey.
Tortured gay wasp register.
It's fine. Plenty of bourbon and surnames.
Yeah.
But the Elizabeth Taylor just said...
That's a great memoir title, bourbon and surnames.
Don't you think that short stories are a bit like sherry?
Every few years, people suggest that they're about to become really popular again.
What, reinvent the city? And they're not, because they're not that good.
I absolutely agree.
I don't really like short stories.
I've suggested a collection of short stories once to my publisher,
and the reaction...
I mean, you'd think I'd laid a log on the TV.
I've also...
Did you write any?
I did, actually.
So, do you have a publisher for your
short fiction?
I've spoken like a publisher.
Never call them short stories.
Short fiction. Maybe we should talk.
Funny you should mention that. I think short story
is a sort of... We ought to have a better
word for what they are because...
Nobody says, I've just published a long story.
Yeah. You know what I mean? It's like story
is the kind of, story
is the stuff. But also, what I've noticed
with short stories,
right, this is a thing that we do here on this podcast
that we should try not to do. So if you say
you're reading a novel by somebody and it's the first
novel that you've read of theirs, like I was reading
Angel by Elizabeth Taylor, and while I was reading it,
I tweeted, I said, I'm really enjoying this book.
Someone will inevitably say to you,
you really should read the short stories.
Right, okay, right, okay, right.
They do that. So I was reading the short
stories, and while I was reading the short stories, I was saying,
oh, these short stories are great. Somebody tweeted
me saying, you really should read
the letters.
So you get to the letters,
and you go, we did this with Nancy
Mitford, right? So I go, you've read the letters? Have you go, we did this with Nancy Mipford, right? You've read the letters.
Have you read the journals?
It's like an endless series of Russian dolls.
This is a very Amician kind of thing, isn't it?
That great thing in information where he's talking about
all the different streets, you know,
how they kind of go down until you get too close.
That's right.
But nobody ever goes...
If I'd read Angel, no one ever would have
the strength of character
to say,
oh, you're reading Angel?
You've done it.
That's it.
That's her best book
and the essence of her work.
This is all you need to read.
Yeah, yeah.
So, John,
John, what have you been reading?
I've been reading,
I feel it's a bit of a cheat
because it's so much fun.
It's a book called
Daily Rituals
by Mason Curry,
who's a young american writer but
he's just done that a really really simple thing but totally delicious how great minds make time
find inspiration and get to work every literary festival you've ever been to this is all anyone
wants to know so you know it's either do you write with a typewriter or a word processor
but also describe your working day yeah yeah and of course it is endlessly fascinating and this
book is just and it's not just writers it's painters it's musicians it's everybody i mean
there are some in here i thought i might just read one because we're going to do one of the
forthcoming podcasts henry green the novelist but this has got to be the best working routine
i've ever heard for none he was managing director of a company called Pontifex.
OK.
And it says,
Green's reliance on the stability of a day job
was no doubt helped by the fact
that his actual duties were practically zero.
According to his biographer, Jeremy Tuglian,
a typical day in the life of Henry York,
managing director of Pontifex,
looked something like this.
He arrived at work at about 10am,
was brought his gin
and spent an hour or two pottering around his office
or gossiping with the secretaries.
11.30, he left to spend the middle part of the working day
at a nearby pub, refreshing himself with a couple of pints of beer
before returning to gin.
A colleague or two would eventually join him there
and then they would talk about people at work or the bar regulars
whose conversation Green would have been eavesdropping on while he was alone.
When the managing director finally returned to his office,
he repeated his morning routine and then, maybe,
wrote a page or two of his novel before catching the bus.
Our mutual friend Tom Hodgkinson once went to interview Bruce Robinson.
He was trying to fix up a date for him,
and he rang up Bruce and said, how about next Tuesday?
And Bruce said, I'll look in my diary.
Sorry, Tom, I've had a look, and it says,
Tuesday afternoon, a bottle of red wine and a wank.
We were talking about JG Ballard last time, weren't we?
Ballard's routine was, because as you know,
Ballard brought up the children on his own.
On his own, yeah.
So he would get the children
ready for school.
He would run them to the school.
He'd come back.
He'd pour himself
an enormous whiskey.
He'd drink the whiskey
for 20 minutes
and then he'd write.
I really understand that.
As to draw the line.
Do a similar thing.
Then he'd sit back. Ballard had a huge scotch on the hour, every hour. understand that as to draw a line I think Bal had had
a huge scotch
on the hour
every hour
that was his routine
and he was actually
asked in an interview
when he said
he finally
he said it got to a point
he thought
I'm not going to start
drinking till 6 o'clock
and the interviewer
asked him
was it hard
putting that off
and he said
hard
it was like
Stalingrad
trying to not drink
till 6pm
after being used
to hitting the
bottle.
What's your
routine,
John?
Sadly,
it doesn't
involve any
reliance on
booze like
that.
It's really
boring.
I can only
really write
fiction in the
morning,
and the earlier
the better.
If I can get
it at 6.30,
7am,
that's fantastic,
but more usually
it's like 8.30,
9,
and then done by lunchtime
really. I've got so much
stuff on the screen right just now that my partner
Nick comes out in the afternoons and we work on
whatever script we're working on in the afternoon
and then end of the day deal
with emails and what not but really sort of
9 till 1 is kind of
novel. I'm exactly the
same, the earlier I can get to the desk
the happier I am,
so that I can be done by lunchtime.
If you feel you somehow get a thousand wads before breakfast,
you've kind of mugged the day,
everything after that is grieving.
I mean, I used to be able to do the long,
through the night stuff.
I just fall asleep now
and end up putting saliva on the desk.
I also think that's some, you know,
some bullshit, isn't it?
That kind of, that almost feels to me like, look at me,
fag hanging out of the mouth, tapping on the typewriter.
I think it can work when you're young,
but Paul Schrader, who wrote Tax Driver famously,
he would set up all night, out of his mind, and coke and whiskey.
Cocaine, that is, not cocoa.
And he'd write till five in the morning till he collapsed,
and then he would revise Sober the next day. And he said out of the 12 or 14 pages he'd write till five in the morning till he collapsed and he said then he would revise sober the next day
and he said out of the 12 or 14 pages
he'd written he might get two
that were good but he said
that sort of regime only works
for a young man someday in their 20s
because as you get into your 40s
you really have to have an incredible
amount of stamina to want to live that
lifestyle of abuse
So this book
routines is it daily richard sorry is it interviews or is it no no he literally is just gets a cut and
paste job but it's just getting a lot a lot of these stories some of which are unintentionally
like that one hilarious some of which are actually quite useful yeah i mean it does it honestly
having read it the thing is getting up early does seem to be the consistent.
I mean, there's a great one where Agatha Christie says,
everybody says, when do you ever write?
And she's great.
She just said, well, I don't really know.
I sort of, I write in different rooms,
but if I'm doing something, I just go like a dog with a bone
and just disappear off and gnaw at it until I'm finished.
There's a great, obviously, Kingsley Amis,
which is punctuated again by whiskey.
But I thought maybe I should say
do you want to hear what Martin Amis' daily routine
is? Oh, yes.
I've really got to resist doing my
Amis impersonations, just in case.
We should all.
And he basically said that he doesn't have any
squeamishness about writing, he told the Paris Review.
Amis says he writes every weekday,
driving himself to an office less than a mile from
his London apartment.
He keeps business hours, but generally writes only for a small
portion of the time
everyone assumes I'm a systematic nose to the grindstone
kind of person he said
but to me it seems like a part time job really
in that writing from 11 to 1 continuously
is a very good day's work
11 to 1
11, 12, 1, that's two hours.
Then you can read or play tennis or snooker.
All very germane to what we're discussing next.
Two hours.
I think most writers would be very happy
with two hours of concentrated work.
But it's not wrong.
I mean, I'll often sit,
the longest stretch I'll sit writing fiction for
will be four or five hours.
But, you know, of those four or five,
it's probably really two is the way it all happens.
Yeah, yeah. Who's that book by?
it's Mason Carey
it's published by Picador
in the UK
but it's kind of
it's fun
it's really good fun
and actually some of the painters
are almost more interesting
than the writers
I found it most diverting
and I'm sure
it'll reappear
in future podcasts
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So the novel that our guest, John Niven, was keen that we, I think in all cases, revisit.
Have we all read it before?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Was The Information by Martin Amis.
John, can you say a bit about why?
I know you're a big Amis fan. Yeah, yeah.
As is known, I'm a huge fan.
This book, it's the last part
of what's kind of your West London
trilogy, if you will, with Money in 1984
and then London Fields
in 1989 and this was published
the information in 1995.
So, to my mind, as the years
go by, it's actually the best book of the
three. I think Money and London Fields
get enormous plaudits and rightly so
I think it's partly that
it was a novel born into quite
as is well known difficult circumstances
he got a huge advance to
at the time I think you'd remember better than I do
Half a Million
Half a Million for two
It's Half a Million for two
20 years ago
he was famous for dental problems
and he got his teeth fixed
and it was a long gestation process
and his wife of course
it was a very tumultuous period in his life
I read the novel
when it came out because I was already a fan
but I guess I was only about 25
26 myself then
and I loved it, I thought it was very funny
but books are like that
they're not inert things.
They change for you over the years.
Like wine, as your age and your relationship to them completely changes.
And to read it now in middle age, in my late 40s,
is a completely different experience.
We were saying earlier, weren't we?
I was saying, I read this when it came out when I was like 27.
Reading it in 2016,
I've got 20 years more experience
of both the book industry and myself.
Yes.
Both of which have made me feel a bit bleaker about it.
It is harsh, isn't it?
It is so harsh.
As we know, it's a novel really about literary envy.
Well, actually, I'm going to stop you there.
We have a tradition on Backlisted of reading out the blurb
just to try and...
Just to try and...
Exactly.
Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't.
Normally we would also spend a bit of time
giving you a potted biography of Martin Amis,
but I don't believe anyone listening to this
does.
Martin Amis, my struggle.
My mum might be sort of...
Who has this fellow?
So, OK, this is the...
Original first edition.
Flap copy from the original first edition.
95. Controversially published by HarperCollins,
he had been a Jonathan Cape author previously for all his books,
and this was the story.
He moved agents, went to Andrew Wiley,
and then Wiley did the auction, Cape lost,
and he went to HarperCollins.
And so here's the book, which they launched as a bestseller this is the description they gave to the public here we go
there aren't many ways for one writer to hurt another even if the literary world were as
hopelessly corrupt as some people like to think it is a writer cannot seriously damage a rival
this is the unwelcome conclusion reached by Richard Tull,
failed novelist,
when he contemplates the agonising success
of his best friend and worst enemy, Gwyn Barry.
A scathing review, a scurrilous profile,
such things might hurt Gwyn Barry,
but they wouldn't hurt him.
So Richard Tull is obliged to look elsewhere,
to the weapons of the outside world,
seductions and succubi, hoaxes, mind games, frame-ups, sabotage,
until at last Richard finds what he's looking for,
a true professional, someone who hurts people in exchange for cash.
That's actually quite good, isn't it?
It's a very good blurb.
It's quite good, but it goes a bit straight after.
There's a kind of final paragraph where it says,
in the information, Martin Amis returns to the big picture
of money in London fields.
And I think within that one sentence,
you can sense the publisher's fear that it's not going to sell.
Yeah, I agree.
I just think that one sentence within that,
you can read between the lines, incredible fear.
There's also this really peculiar sentence following that
that says, the book takes in the whole of society
with the possible exception of the middle classes.
So all of society is part from one third.
It's a very odd sentence.
It is an odd sentence.
It's something he said himself, didn't he?
That his father's fiction dealt almost exclusively
with the middle classes,
whereas his tends to deal with people from the gutter
or the upper classes.
The kind of two worlds he inhabits.
But the Blurber, it's such a fabulously funny novel.
Richards, as he says, he's a failed novelist.
I love the sense where he works as a sort of book reviewer.
He's forever lugging some thousand-page Robert Southie.
They're all late 18th century.
The works of Thomas the works of
Thomas Tussert
really mostly
forgotten
mediocre writers
unlamented
19th century
and it's always
some thousand page
tome
that he has to
review for 30 quid
and you know
his wife still
calculates the
following two book
reviews a month
short
a paragraph
there's a brilliant
line about
a paragraph
review of a thousand-page novel,
which had to be in by four o'clock.
And he works for a vanity publisher, Tantalus.
And he's also the literary editor of something called The Little Review.
Nobody has any idea how little it really is.
That's what I say.
When he's in America, that's the line, isn't it?
The Americans would have no idea of just how little the little review was.
Finally, we should say that Richard Tull is the author of six novels,
only three of them published.
The first one is called A Forethought.
The second one is called Dreams Don't Mean Anything.
And the sixth one is called Dreams Don't Mean Anything.
And the sixth one is called Untitled.
He also goes through saying he knows he's failing as a novelist. He says after Untitled, he knows there are prospective novels stacked in his drawers called Unfinished, Unattempted and Unimagined.
It's so cruel on Richard's, you know, hope to ambition.
The thing is, Richard is just a spectacularly awful character.
I mean, he's just so...
I'm kind of sympathetic to Richard.
That's the genius of Amos,
is he makes you sympathetic for this man who is plotting violence,
serious violence against his best friend.
But he has no redeeming features.
He hits his small child.
But provoked by Gwyn Barry, I think you'll find.
Going number nine in the bestseller list.
Yeah, that's what triggers it.
Because Gwyn Barry is a pathetic, fat Welsh wimp.
Gwyn was his university friend.
Who he'd always lauded it over
and had what she called the girlfriend, Gilda, the girlfriend,
who I love.
There's so many great details.
He used to steal buns for her when he smuggled into her room at college
and she liked marmalade.
That's what she got.
What happens is he becomes a hugely, hugely...
Gigantically successful.
In a kind of Paolo Cello kind of, you know, alchemist kind of way.
The book's... What's the first one called? Summertown, which is a... In a kind of Paolo Cello, alchemist kind of way.
What's the first one called?
Summertown.
Do you know what I was thinking about this when I was on the way up here?
I was thinking, I can think of contemporary examples, but I'm not sure I want to say them.
He writes what Richard describes as tricks.
Pure tricks.
That's one of the things that comes up pure Trex
which for listeners
who are of a certain generation
Trex was commercially
through 60s and 70s
was large
so you don't
you don't think
you can buy Trex anymore
to me it's always
it's an amalgam of
text and dreck
yeah
it's just this
a worthless
kind of garbage
it's a great word
that means nothing
but by some fluke of publishing
and public taste it's enormous
so Gwyn's had this colossal
success and
lives in a gigantic
house in Notting Hill
whereas Richard's in a tiny apartment
with a wife and two kids and is
failing at everything he does and
his hatred for Gwyn
Richard had to see whether the experience of disappointment
was going to make him bitter or better,
and it made him bitter.
He was sorry there was nothing he could do about it.
He wasn't up to better.
Richard continued to review books.
He was very good at book reviewing,
and when he reviewed a book, it stayed reviewed.
Otherwise, he was an
ex-novelist, or not ex so
much as Void, or Phantom,
the literary editor of The Little Magazine
and a special director of
the Tantalus Press.
Now, I have to say
in 1995 I found that
terribly amusing.
I find it funny now
for a slightly different reason.
Yeah, life,
it's a way of catching people up,
doesn't it?
The thing with Gwen is,
I love the way it starts off,
as you sort of mentioned in the intro,
the torments he tries to inflict on Gwen
are initially quite petty,
aren't they?
For instance,
he sends him a copy of the entire
weekend edition of the Los Angeles Times,
which is like,
there's a suitcase-sized piece of newsprint
with a little post on it saying,
something to interest you here.
From John, from an anonymous...
With no page reference.
Knowing that Gwyn's ego is so rough,
he will spend the entire weekend combing every single page.
Which he does.
But however, Richard suddenly suspects,
what if there is a reference to that?
So Richard ends up going through the entire thing himself,
cutting his fingers to pieces,
having to then repackage it all pristinely.
And then Gwen, of course, finds a reference to himself,
which there is one in there that Richard's missed.
So he has to then go back again.
No, no, he goes to Gwen's house that's lying on the side,
and he says, oh, are you reading the LED?
He goes, yeah, a reference to me on it.
It's a copy of his first novel for sale,
second-hand copy for sale.
That's right, that's right.
It's in the small ads, that's correct, that's right.
We should also add that Richard Tull is also, in theory,
working on a non-fiction book
called The History of Increasing Humiliation,
which becomes a running gag as well
of course his own, Richard's current
novel, Dreams Don't Mean Anything
is a book that's so
crazily post-modern and terrible
and difficult
and possible narrative, it actually inflicts
illness on anyone
everybody who reads it untitled
nobody can get through
except page 9
another one Nobody can get through except page nine.
Blinding my dreams.
Another one comes down with some terrible disease.
He realises at one point all he really
needed to do was to get Gwyn Barry to read
his own novel.
He'd have given him a brain tumour and that would have been it.
The comedy
in Amos is jet black.
There's a brilliant line here
the comedy line
there's a line where
they play tennis a lot
Richard and Gwyn
and Snooker
said Richard pensively
well we know one thing
what's that?
you're not going to get a profundity requital
a profundity requital is an enormous American stipend
Gwyn who was wrong flexed his forehead and said requital. Profundity requital is an enormous American stipend. It looms largely in the half of the book.
Gwyn, who was wrong,
flexed his forehead and said,
a million people can't be wrong.
Richard, who was also wrong,
said, a million people
are always wrong.
Let's play.
And that's condensed
into just a couple of lines in the middle
of this chapter.
There's three or four comic set pieces in the novel
that stay with me always.
I want you to read the tiny bit, if that's okay.
Yeah.
It comes quite early in the book
when Richard is taken to a lunch
at which there are various publishing luminaries
and he's under the impression that Gwen's doing him a favour,
that he's being considered for the editorship of a new magazine.
And this is very funny, but it also makes a fantastic point
about literature that I'm an enormous fan of.
So they're lunching in some sort of swank Mayfair restaurant.
The financier spoke about the kind of literary magazine
he would like to be associated with,
the kind of magazine he was prepared to be the financier of.
Not so much like magazine A, not so much like Magazine B,
more like Magazine C, defunct,
or Magazine D, published in New York.
Quinn Barry was then asked about the kind of magazine
he would like to be associated with,
the kind of magazine that had high standards.
That were the Captain of Industry,
the Shadow Minister for Arts,
the female columnist and the male columnist.
Rory Pontagionet, the reporter, was not consulted.
Neither was the photographer, who was leaving
anyway. Neither, depressingly, was
Richard Tull, who was struggling to remain
under the impression that he was being groomed for the editor's
job. The only questions that came
his way were about technical matters, print
runs, break-even junctures and the like.
Would there be any point, the financier
said he was saying, in doing any
market research stuff?
Richard said, what, reader profile
stuff? He had no idea what to say.
Age and sex, things like that.
I thought we might press a questionnaire and
say students reading English at London,
something of that kind, to see if they like
high standards, Richard said.
Targeting, said the male columnist,
who was about 28 and experimentally
bearded with a school dinner look about him. The column the male columnist, who was about 28 and experimentally bearded with a school dinner look about him.
The column the male columnist wrote was sociopolitical.
Come on, Richard said, this isn't America
where the magazine market is completely balkanised,
where, you know, they have magazines
for the twice-divorced South Malaccan scuba diver.
Still, there are more predictable preferences, said the publisher.
Women's magazines are read by women and men.
There was a silence.
To fill it, Richard said, has anyone ever really established
whether men prefer to read men and whether women prefer to read women?
Oh, please, what is this, said the female columnist.
We're not talking about motorbikes or knitting patterns.
We're talking about literature, for God's sake.
Richard said, is this
without interest? Nabokov said he was
frankly homosexual in his literary taste.
I don't think men and women read or
write in exactly the same way. They go at
it differently. And I suppose,
the woman said, that there are racial differences too.
Richard didn't
answer. For a moment, he looked worryingly
short-necked.
He was, in fact, coping with a digestive matter. Or a moment he looked worryingly short-necked. He was in fact coping
with the digestive matter.
Or at least he was sitting tight
until the digestive matter resolved itself
one way or the other. I can't believe I'm
hearing this, the woman said. I thought we
came here today to talk about art.
What's the matter with you? Are you drunk?
Richard turned his senses on
her. The woman, gruff, sizeable,
stalely handsome
and always barging through to her share of the truth
Richard knew the type because literature knew the type
like the smug boiler in the Pritchett story
the Labour politician up north
proud of her brusqueness and her good big bum
The column the female columnist wrote
wasn't specifically about being a woman
but the photograph above it somehow needed to have long hair and make-up
for it all to hang together.
The shadow minister for the arts said,
isn't this what literature's meant to be about, transcending human difference?
Here, here, said the female columnist.
Me, I don't give a damn whether people are male, female, black, white, pink,
puce or polka-dotted.
And that's why you're no good, Richard said.
Steady there, said Sebi, the financier.
Then he added, as if the very appellation refreshed him,
Gwyn.
Everyone turned to him in silence.
Gwyn was staring at his coffee spoon with a fascinated frown.
This is something Gwyn started doing to Richard,
insane irritation.
It's looking at an orange on his spoon
as if he's seeing it for the first time. He thinks
it's a novelistic thing to do.
Gwen replaced the spoon that saw it and looked
up, his face clearing, his green eyes
brightening. Gwen said very slowly,
I find I never think in terms of men,
in terms of women. I always think
in terms of people.
There was an immediate burble of approbation.
Gwen, it seemed, have douched the entire
company in common sense and played humanity.
Richard had to raise his
voice, which meant that his cough kicked in,
but he went ahead with his passionate speech.
It was that little rapt pause
before the word people.
That was what did it.
A very low-level remark,
if I may say so. Hey, Gwyn,
you know what you remind me of?
A quiz in a colour magazine, you know.
Are you cut out to be a teacher?
Would you rather teach A, history, B, geography, or C, children?
Well, you don't get a choice about teaching children,
but there is a choice and a difference between history and geography.
It must make you feel nice and young to say that being a man means nothing
and being a woman means nothing and what matters is being a person how about being a spider gwen let's imagine you're a spider you're
a spider and you've just had your first serious date and you're limping away from that now you're
looking over your shoulder and there's your girlfriend eating one of your legs like it was
a chicken drumstick what would you say say? I know, you'd say,
I find I never think in terms of male spiders or in terms of female spiders.
I always think in terms of spiders.
Oh, Tomo, brilliant.
Come on, you have to say, utter genius.
On form, I mean, there is probably no...
I don't think there is a better comic writer in English on form.
That's a very Amos thing to do in one of his books as well,
is to set up these opposing figures, right?
And in this book, it's Richard Tull and Gwynne Barry.
And I was thinking about this,
and I think the brilliance of this, reading it again,
is that it's not really a battle
between an unsuccessful author and a successful one,
although it is that.
But it's that most authors
think of themselves as Richard
Tull and all other authors
as Gwynne Barrow.
It's probably a bit of that.
I think what's getting attacked there really
is the notion of PC.
This idea of we're all the same.
And that doesn't really fly in literature. really though is the notion of PC this idea of you know we're all the same and everybody's you know and that
doesn't really fly in literature
because literature is about examining
exploring difference this is what kind of
Richard's rightly saying
and the idea of I think Amy said in the interview
at the time the very admirable
notion of political correctness is to
press a sort of accelerator pedal and have
us in a future where there's no racism
and no sexism and no misogyny.
All these things are in the past.
However, it takes generations to get there.
And the idea that you can suddenly hit a button
by outlawing certain language.
I mean, later on, Richard refers to women as reeking of spinst.
Spinst.
Back to spinst.
You can't say things like that.
He says, why can't I say things like that?
And Gwen says, because people will start avoiding you.
You can't say things like that in Gwynedd's,
why can't I say things like that in Gwynedd's?
Because people will start avoiding you.
So Richard's kind of filter is certainly off a lot of the time.
I loved coming back and reading it and found it very painful, very funny.
But I also found that there were bits of it that, you know,
I think the Steve Cousins subplot,
much less good than I remember it,
maybe just because...
Well, he'd done it as well.
I remember thinking that at the time, and looking at it again now,
Amos has played that character in previous novels several times, right?
Yeah.
It doesn't dent the book for me, but I know what you're saying.
You feel it's the kind of character that Keith Talent plays
in London Fields
because the Richard
Gwen and the wives
it's so
it's a
big book, it's a 500 page novel
and it's
written in Amos'
I think it's his longest novel
I'm interested that you think of the three.
Not having read Money for a long time
and not having read London Fields for even longer,
I have to say I enjoyed this way more than I was...
I'd always thought it was the least good of the three,
and I think you might be right now, I think,
with the benefit of hindsight and a bit of life under one's belt.
When we knew that John was going to come
and talk about the information
and we were going to be reading the information,
I was thinking, I haven't read an Amos recently.
And I realised I hadn't actually read an Amos since Night Train in 97.
I mean, I love Amos.
So I've read like two or three in the last month just to catch up, really.
I've read Experience, the memoir, and Cobra the Dread,
and the last novel, The Zone of Interest.
They're all terrific.
All three of them were terrific.
And the thing that struck me about Amis,
Amis takes a lot of flack.
We know that, right?
Some of it maybe justifies, some of it maybe not.
But in the case of all those books you know Cobra the Dread was as a book problematic in some ways experience
terrific memoir and yet wanders away from the point quite a lot zone of interest is it is it
should it be should he be writing novel another novel about holocaust is it appropriate none of
them take into account the thing that's really clear in the information as well,
which is when it comes to writing brilliant sentences,
I mean, I can't think of another contemporary British writer
who has quite the same facility with words and language
and likes making hard sounds out of words.
You know, the bit that you were just reading, John, exactly that.
If you're remotely interested in narrative,
you know, how, I mean, the way he puts himself into the text.
I mean, he is, you do feel you are in the hands of somebody
who can sort of do it.
He can do comedy.
He can do, you know, he can do diversion into science. He can do, I mean, he's just, he is technically of do it, he can do comedy he can do diversion into science
he can do, I mean he's just
he is technically a pretty spectacular
writer, I guess the thing
that people complain about with Amos is that
whether you give a shit about any of the characters
because he just writes a book
and also whether he can do working class as well
I mean Lionel Asbo, I love his books
but Lionel Asbo is a terrible book
I thought there were a couple of bits in that that made me bark with
laughter. I think there was always going to be funny things
but it's a really... Lionel's explanation of 9-11 is just
phrase. Yeah, but I couldn't read it.
I think what he does is
a prose stylist, I don't think he
has an eco in his generation and
he believes with Nabokov
doesn't he that style is art, style
is morality. So
to a degree I don't really care
what he's writing about
I buy that
there's this brilliant quote from him
you know when Yellow Dog came out
Yellow Dog 2003
terrible reviews
although it's one of only two of his books
that have ever been long listed for the Booker Prize
that and Times Arab
that and Times Arab
but he gave this brilliant quote
in response to why
he had received such a drubbing
for Yellow Dog. He said,
quote,
No one wants to read a difficult literary novel
or deal with a prose style which reminds them
how thick they are.
Go, Marty.
But yeah,
when faced with the fire,
do I reach for the bucket of water
or the can of petrol?
There's a push towards
egalitarianism, making writing
more chummy and interactive
instead of a higher voice.
And that's what I go to literature for.
And in terms, even in Lionel Aspo,
you know, it might misfire.
He's still trying to find a way of representing that stuff
on a higher linguistic level.
I just think of him in terms of...
I mean, I don't mind Lionel Aspo.
I prefer Lionel Aspo to any novel by Julian Barnes or Ian McKeown.
Well, that's his real name. So when I think of Martin Amis,
I think of those other two novelists.
I think of them being part of a generation.
Matthew Clayton's views do not represent those of everyone
around the table.
I'd far prefer that he'd be
writing something like Lionel Asbo than another
Ian McEwan novel appeared.
I think what's interesting here about Amis
is I think all three of those guys
are pretty good writers of English.
I have to say I love Barnes.
I think Barnes is an amazing,
as is actually Martin, a brilliant essayist.
But there is something,
there's just something about Amis.
That's a fantastic quote, Andy,
by the way. I must scribble that down.
I just love that the
smallest, it's that thing you feel there's a brilliant quote in here where he says, so I must scribble that down. But, I mean, I just love the smallest...
It's that thing you feel... There's a brilliant quote in here where he says...
He's writing about Richard's Untitled,
which feels a little bit autobiographical.
He's saying he was trying to write genius novels like Joyce.
Joyce was the best yet at genius novels.
And he was a drag about half the time.
Richard arguably was a drag all the time.
If you had to settle on a one-word description of his stuff,
then you would almost certainly make do with unreadable.
Untitled, for now, remained unread,
but no-one had ever willingly finished its predecessors.
Richard was too proud and too lazy, in a way,
too clever and too nuts to write talent novels.
For instance, the thought of getting a character out of the house
and across town to somewhere else made him go vague with exhaustion.
And I sometimes feel this about Amos.
It's like, oh, my God, it must be so exhausting.
You know, every...
Paragraph has to be brilliant.
Every bit of everything that's happening is just...
But don't you think, John, as well, that, like, the...
You know what his dad said famously, of course.
He said, you know, the thing about Martin's novels they they don't have enough sentences like they finished their
drinks and left you know kingsley's complaint about money yeah it when martin himself appeals
in it he sent the book flying across the room breaking the rules buggering about with the reader
drawing attention to himself don't you think john that this very I mean this is the thing
this is one of the things
that I think people
who don't like Amos
either don't like about him
or don't guess about him
you know
a lot of that stuff
about Richard's
awful books
and the midlife pain
that's in this book
as well
it seems really
autobiographical to me
how do you not read it
and see that that's
coming from
I think he was
uniquely placed to write this, wasn't it?
Because he's neither Richard Tull
nor Gwen Barry. He's not a
billion-selling punter of cracks
and he's not a failure.
You could see how he could completely
delineate each character brilliantly.
He inhabits both their worlds brilliantly.
And the point, so just to finish off
on that point we were making there about what he thinks
the novel is and what literature does,
I think it's brilliantly said by Richard in an interview,
in a radio interview later in the book.
The radio interviewer is asking, what's your book about?
What's it saying?
So he asks, what's your book trying to say?
He says, it's not trying to say anything.
It's saying it.
It's saying itself for 400 pages.
I couldn't put it any other way.
He's not coming to tell you some message
or some big story to tell.
It's style.
In Richard's case, appalling, unreadable style.
Matthew,
we've been incredibly
relevant so far. Is there
something you could pull us away from
relevant with?
Actually, it's quite difficult to attend to
as you've already
suggested everyone knows every single thing about his life you know i know more about martin amos than
any other novelist probably so there's one thing you might not know which is and it's kind of
pertinent to what we've been discussing which is do you know and i'm going to ask you andy do you
know what novelist has a character reoc reoccurring character, in fact, called Amos Smallbone?
Amos Smallpenis, in other words.
Ooh, is it A.S. Byatt?
I wish it was. I wish it was.
It's not. It's Peter James.
Yeah, Peter James.
Oh, Peter James. Oh, my gosh, yeah.
So Peter James is a crime novelist.
Brighton's Peter James
Amos Smallbone
is a reoccurring gangster with a penis
that's described as being like a stubby pencil
is it
and the reason for this
is that Peter James
once encountered Martin Amos
at the Galaxy Book Awards
and Peter James and Martin Amis had been at the same
Oxford Crammer together.
So Peter James
went up to Martin Amis and said
Alright, small penis?
Do you remember me?
We're both here, I'm about to get an award, you're about to get an award.
Do you remember we were at the same Crammer together?
And Martin Amis said
I don't remember you, and you only remember
me because I'm famous
and they walked away.
I find it hard to believe he said that.
He's such a nice man.
It's too neat in a way.
That's very good.
So just quickly, the second half of the novel, What I Love,
is when they go to America for a publicity tour
for Gwen's new novel. Of course, Richard when they go to America for a publicity tour for Gwyn's
new novel. Of course, Richard's going to profile
him from a Sunday supplement.
There's all constantly funny scenes where Gwyn's
travelling first class and Richard's struck right
at the back of economy. He gets summoned
up to see Gwyn in his crimson barge.
It's just great.
He's in a low-rent hotel
room and Gwyn's got an entire suite
at the floor,
at the Excel suite.
The humiliation for Richard.
Richard's lugging around a Hessian sack with 25 copies of his own novel
that he's trying to fly.
It's just humiliation.
It's just wild.
And this is all building up towards...
Gwyn is in line for this thing called
the Profundity Requital,
which is basically a cross, I think,
between the Nobel Prize.
It involves an enormous cash stipend,
which the recipient gets every year for life.
And so Richard's entire goal, his mission,
is to stop Gwyn getting the Profundity Requital.
So it turns out in each city in America they're visiting,
there's one of the Profundity judges,
who are known by Gwyn's PR team as Profundity 1,
Profundity 2, Profundity 2, Profundity...
They're going to be there. So what Richard's...
Richard's plan is complex and devious.
He's arranged for reviews of all these people's
books to be published in the Little Magazine
for favourable reviews and again
they have no idea how Little Magazine
is, which he then lays on them
to show them he's a good bloke and they love him
and he then gains their acquaintance and he's already
found out, for instance instance that he's going to
be meeting a hugely feminist critic who's one of the judges
so he's basically going to paint Gwyn
as to the right of sort of
Paul Raymond or an absolute
sex offender. So he basically
is trying to stitch him up with each judge
according to the judge's prejudices.
So one of the judges he meets in the section where he
reads is Professor Mills
who's a professor of jurisprudence
who's a hugely learned and famously very liberal man
who he gets talking to at a party
and he knows he's one of the...
Richard goes through the preliminaries
of telling himself not to get carried away.
They're talking about
the notion of capital punishment.
Richard said, it's amazing how
hidebound we are in England. Still
the old ideas, deterrence,
sequestration, there's a lot of
talk, but no one will bring about any change.
Even our most liberal public figures
say one thing, and Richard
appeared to hesitate, as if considering the
etiquette or equity of simply
seizing on the nearest example. Well,
take Gwen Barry. Thoroughly
liberal in all his
pronouncements, but deep down,
he surprised me. In his writing, he
seems irreproachably liberal in such matters.
Gwen, oh, you've no idea the kind
of things he'll say in private. He actually favours
a return to more public forms of punishment.
As Mills
leans backwards, Richard
went for the formality of telling himself
not to get carried away.
Yes, with paying spectators,
retributive and exemplary,
but with a vengeance, so to speak. Stocks and
pillories, ceremonial scourgings,
ducking stools, tarring and feathering,
impalements and flayings. You see,
Gwyn thinks the mob has had a poor deal in recent years.
Public stonings, even lynchings.
You're an Irishman, Professor.
You must have followed the case, the bomb in the shopping centre.
Here's what Gwyn said.
He said,
Then,
after a couple of months of that, where their arms
and their legs and their cocks have all been ripped
off, do excuse me, string
them up for the Ravens. Oh yes, that's
friend Barry for you.
They
stood side by side, enjoying
what Richard felt to be a just and
wordless solidarity.
However, earlier that winter,
the case was still subdued.
Professor Mills had Christmas with his wife
at their holiday home in Lake Taco.
Forcing entry on Christmas Eve,
a crew of nomad joy readers
had then subjected the Millses
to a 200-hour ordeal
of abuse, battery, bondage
and arson. The Professor
was of course aware that a personal
experience, however dire, should only
carry statistical weight in
the settlement of one's intellectual positions
but he was doing a lot of rethinking
which he was going to have to do a lot of
anyway because the many scores of
texts he had studied and annotated
in preparation for his next book, a lifetime
effort provisionally entitled
The Lenient Hand, had been mockingly torched by the intruders,
along with the rest of his workstation,
and it seemed everything else he'd ever cared about.
His wife, Marietta, still in deep therapy,
hadn't uttered a word since New Year's Day.
The professor has has of course
turned horrifically right wing
and everything
Richard says
ends up
teeing up
giving Gwen the profundity
quite so to speak
but I don't know why
I find that quite
I was
the reason I'd chosen
all of it was
rereading it this summer
on holiday in Italy
and I was just
sort of six o'clock
you know
cocktails out
and I was floating in the pool reading the book
and Charlotte McGovern-Hanscom
she said I feared for you.
You were laughing so hard
I thought you were going to drown.
It's the way in the Parenza that a professionally
entitled The Lenient Hand
had been mockingly torched.
It's just so
it's just such a
perfectly weighted comic
writing
it did make me think
John
that Straight White Male
in particular
feels like it might have
kind of come out of
some sort of
relationship with this book
well
you know
I'd go further
I'd say
everything I write
is in the shadow of
Amos
and you know
that novel
even though
because there's a great
thing that
Kennedy wins
that prize
at the Redbrick University
which kind of
has an element
I'd forgotten
about the profundity
I mean
Street White Mail
took a lot of the reviews
and as you pointed out
earlier
Andy Martin Amis
got such a hard ride
some of the reviewers
of mine
of Street White Mail
took great delight
in saying things like
this is the best novel
Martin Amis hasn't written
for years and it made me
angry and embarrassed, actually, because
you know, like, you don't
think, you never think you're fit to stand in the shadow
of your predecessors for your mind.
You know, Amis said that, you know,
Nabokov said Joyce's English
is, my English is patball
to Joyce's champion game. And I think
every writer feels that, but the ones
they admire, you're not fit to re-ink their printer, if you will.
I read this again, basically,
and thought that this book was really underrated,
and including by me.
I think that I came off the back of it.
Yeah, completely.
But also, I was going to make the comparison, John,
that I was starting to think,
OK, so this is like 95,
this novel comes out in the middle of Britpop, doesn't it?
Yeah, yeah.
Which Britpop album is this? And I in the middle of brit pop yeah yeah which brit pop album
is this and i've worked it i'd swear it out it's it's pulps this is hardcore oh right it's like
it's just like a record which has also got terrible reviews when it came out is actually
terrific and right and stands up now really really well but it's also like there's something about
them both they're both a bit too long they're both kind of decadent they're quite difficult expensive and they're both chronicles of like failure and
failure and self-loathing and they're both they're both made by people who've come off big hits yeah
yeah but with things about quote unquote common people. Andy, you're on fire.
But it's true. And then the same thing happens to pulp for a while,
which happens to Amos,
which is that they burn too bright.
They become synonymous with a particular era.
And then people want to kind of move away
and distance themselves from that era.
That's very well thought out commentary there.
And I wish I'd put that kind of pre-
Okay, I wrote it down.
I mean, what about the thing that always comes up
with Amos is that we're all...
It's a table of men.
We're all enjoying it.
He doesn't work in the same way for women.
I mean, I'm interested in...
Matthew had a point about this.
What the hell was that?
Your girlfriend.
My wife. So my wife
is literally just my wife
loves Martin Amis. Not your girlfriend.
Not my girlfriend, no.
The anecdotal evidence.
My wife also loves Martin Amis.
She read Martin Amis
I think when she was like 15,
16, 17 and I can see
her then reading Martin Amis and absolutely
loving it because it is,
for someone who's a kind of, you know,
A-level English, slightly rebellious teenager,
you know, a teenager with intellectual pretensions,
she's never going to listen to this.
You're describing me too, exactly, when I discovered it.
That they would read it, and it's something about Martin Ames
where he exists in that bit in between sort of high literature
and popular fiction, isn't it?
And when you're that age, you really, I don't know.
I remember reading London Fields when I was young
and thinking, God, this is brilliant, you know.
It's the thing that Richard Tull describes in the book,
which is a cult author with a mass audience.
Yeah.
The thing that everybody wants.
But I also think, though, it really, I mean, it's Notting Hill, isn't it?
It's Notting Hill. It's the Notting Hill I remember when I first moved to London. It didn't sell as well. A weird that everybody wants. But I also think, though, it really, I mean, it's Notting Hill, isn't it? It's Notting Hill.
It's the Notting Hill I remember when I first moved to London.
It didn't sell as well.
A weird mixture of people.
It didn't sell as well as they needed to sell.
I seem to remember that it wasn't.
It did okay, didn't it?
You'd love to sell that quantity of books now.
But then again, the culture was, you know.
Isn't it the end of Notting Hill?
It's like, this is Notting Hill before it becomes Richard Curtis.
This is right at the last moment.
I moved from there.
I moved to Notting Hill in 1995, the year the novel came out.
Did you?
I lived there for two years,
sort of when I first started working at London Records.
So I'd just moved from Glasgow,
and my friend owned a house and I was renting a room.
And, you know, it was still...
You could go down the Portobello Road and that pub the Warwick Castle
was still an awful
cesspit
and it's all gone now
it's long gone
there isn't a single
place like that left
even I remember
the Errol Percy
up Ladbroke Grove
for a long time
was the last
bastion of scum
and even that's now
sort of pan fried
trout and fucking
frosted
sylvan young
gastropub
so funnily enough
my Charlotte
owns a flat
in Hackney
and over there
it now reminds me
incredibly of
Notting Hill
20 years ago
there's still a lot
of rough estates
and proper sky sports
boozers
carpeted floor
England flag up
you know
but surrounded
by flat whites
and sort of designer
you know
dream palaces
and pretty soon
you're not given
another 10 years
that'll all be gone too
you know
as will
everywhere in London
be sort of levelled into flat whitedom.
You know, I think Amos is like Welbeck.
I think there is a gender split in how people receive what those writers do.
But I also think if you find it funny, then you're probably going to let other stuff go
and it won't bother you as much, even if it should bother you, right?
And there's this brilliant quote from Amos in Experience.
How do the humourless raise
children? How does it get done?
How does the stuff
get done?
But Amos also, Amos like with
style, style is morality.
He also says in Experience, and this is really central
to understanding what he's about.
If you don't have that sense of humour,
he thinks you're missing an essential intellectual component.
His criticism of Jeremy Corbyn, which of course made loads of headlines,
was he's got no sense of humour.
If he doesn't have a sense of humour, how can you expect him to have empathy?
If he doesn't have empathy, how can you expect him
to do all these other things you need him to do?
And I think when you read Amos, he's so bright
and his view of the world is so subtle, so complex, so nuanced.
The war against cliche, you know,
the whole of his sense of himself as a writer
is not being able to be boiled down into small soundbites.
And it is that extraordinary sense of vertigo-inducing, you know,
when you're reading an Amos novel.
Just very quickly,
I'm glad you mentioned The War Against Clichy.
It's a fabulous collection
of his criticism
and there's one
in particular in that
which was his review
of Hannibal,
the Thomas Harris novel.
He was a huge fan
of Red Dragon
and Silence of the Lambs.
Hannibal,
as anyone who's read them all know,
completely loses the plot.
But at the time
it came out,
it was hailed as a contender
for the Pulitzer.
It was hailed as literature.
And so Amos brilliantly takes it apart.
And he quotes from, I think, a New York Times review that says,
you know, this is an absolutely sensational novel.
It contains not a single dead or ugly sentence.
And Amos says, it's a genre novel.
So, of course, it contains dead and ugly sentences.
Unless you feel the breath of life in Tommaso Took the Lid Off the Cooler
or Bob Snead
broke the silence.
So as it
would say in the information, it's time
to stop saying hi.
And stop saying bye.
He's a pro.
John. That's it for Backlisted
this week. For another episode, thanks to John Niven.
Thank you very much for having us, guys.
To Matthew.
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