Martin Amis Quotes
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Martin Louis Amis is a British novelist, essayist, memoirist, and screenwriter. His best-known novels are Money and London Fields . He has received the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his memoir Experience and has been listed for the Booker Prize twice . Amis served as the Professor of Creative Writing at the Centre for New Writing at the University of Manchester until 2011. In 2008, The Times named him one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945.Amis's work centres on the excesses of "late-capitalist" Western society, whose perceived absurdity he often satirises through grotesque caricature; he has been portrayed as a master of what The New York Times called "the new unpleasantness". Inspired by Saul Bellow and Vladimir Nabokov, as well as by his father Kingsley Amis, Amis himself has influenced many British novelists of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, including Will Self and Zadie Smith. Wikipedia  

✵ 25. August 1949   •   Other names Martin Louis Amis
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Martin Amis: 136   quotes 2   likes

Martin Amis Quotes

“Nowadays every business in America says how warm it is and how much it cares — loan companies, supermarkets, hamburger chains.”

"Hugh Hefner" (1985)
The Moronic Inferno and Other Visits to America (1986)

“They can't ban or burn Larkin's books. What they can embark on is the more genteel process of literary demotion.”

"Political Correctness: Robert Bly and Philip Larkin" (1997)

“Being inoffensive, and being offended, are now the twin addictions of the culture.”

"First Lady on Trial" The Sunday Times [London] (17 March 1996) (Online text in PDF format) http://www.martinamisweb.com/commentary_files/ma_takesavillage.pdf#search=%22%22now%20the%20twin%20addictions%20of%20the%20culture%22%22

“America has had much more respect for its writers because they had to define what America was. America wasn't sure what it was.”

Interview with Robert Birnbaum (8 December 2003) http://www.identitytheory.com/interviews/birnbaum135.php

“Laughter always forgives.”

"Political Correctness: Robert Bly and Philip Larkin" (1997)

“Beautifully written... the webs of imagery that Harris has so carefully woven... contains writing of which our best writers would be proud... there is not a singly ugly or dead sentence...”

or so sang the critics. Hannibal is a genre novel, and all genre novels contain dead sentences - unless you feel the throb of life in such periods as 'Tommaso put the lid back on the cooler' or 'Eric Pickford answered' or 'Pazzi worked like a man possessed' or 'Margot laughed in spite of herself' or 'Bob Sneed broke the silence.' What these commentators must be thinking of, I suppose, are the bits when Harris goes all blubbery and portentous (every other phrase a spare tyre), or when, with a fugitive poeticism, he swoons us to a dying fall: 'Starling looked for a moment through the wall, past the wall, out to forever and composed herself...' 'It seemed forever ago...' 'He looked deep, deep into her eyes...' 'His dark eyes held her whole...' Needless to say, Harris has become a serial murderer of English sentences, and Hannibal is a necropolis of prose.
Review of Hannibal by Thomas Harris, p. 240
The War Against Cliché: Essays and Reviews 1971-2000 (2001)