The Amis way of saying
things (Filed: 07/04/2001)
Following the progress of Martin Amis, reviewer
and critic
STYLE has always been important to Martin Amis. It is
one thing he has never lacked. Compassion and character development
may be missing from such early works of fiction as Dead Babies and
Success, but there is no denying their narrative verve. Money and
London Fields are supreme examples of a style in search of a
subject. In other words, it is not what Amis says, it is the way he
says it that counts. In these two novels, for example, self-abuse
and apocalypse are simply the springboards which enable him to show
off his talent for turning verbal somersaults.
A literary critic, though, does not have to find a
subject: it is usually delivered in a Jiffy-bag to his door. Amis is
an excellent critic. The War Against Cliche is his third
collection of journalism. It is a sign of Amis's superstardom that
he has not had to compile it himself. This task has been ably
carried out by James Diedrick, author of Understanding Martin Amis
and founder of The Martin Amis Web
(http:/martinamis.albion.edu).
Amis himself has contributed a few defensive
footnotes, emphasising more than once how young he was (23) when he
ticked off elders and betters (J. G. Ballard, William Empson), and
an amusing Foreword in which he attacks "the forces of
democratization" - ie dumbing down. "You can become rich without
having any talent . . . You can become famous without having any
talent . . . But you cannot become talented without having any
talent. Therefore, talent must go."
The War Against Cliche is a rallying cry for all
those who believe in "the talent elite". The literary canon -
including Coleridge, Austen, Milton, Dickens, Donne, Waugh and
Wodehouse - is wheeled out to blow away the ignorant hordes who
think Michael Crichton is as good a writer as V. S. Naipaul. In a
hilarious review of Crichton's The Lost World - the sequel to
Jurassic Park - Amis identifies his "anti-talent for dramatic speech
('Brace yourself, Sarah!', 'There's no time to waste', 'There's
something funny about this island, Ian')" and tracks the "herds of
cliches, roaming free". When it comes to value judgments, Amis
himself is not afraid to seem like a dinosaur.
Since the reviews in this collection span almost 30
years, the reader can follow Amis's progress from precocious pup to
cultural guard-dog. The earliest, a piece on The Guinness Book of
Records for The Spectator in 1971, is easily the weakest. His first
novel, The Rachel Papers, was still two years away. The frequent use
of the personal pronoun and a reference to the publisher's "review
notes" suggest a young gun sure of himself if not of his aim.
Furthermore, now that Amis's hi-energy vocabulary has become a
hallmark, it is a real shock to see him using a word like
"nicely".
On the other hand, the last piece in the book, a
brilliant essay on Lolita, written in 1992, represents Amis at his
best. From the arresting first sentence - "Like the sweat of lust
and guilt, the sweat of death trickles through Lolita" - right
through to the final confession that, having read Vladimir Nabokov's
book "eight or nine times", he expects "to read the novel many more
times", Amis shows how this "cruel book about cruelty . . . rushes
up on the reader like a recreational drug more powerful than any yet
discovered or devised".
In Amis's world Class A literature is habit-forming.
Reviewing a biography of Malcolm Lowry, the alcoholic author of
Under The Volcano, Amis says "his addiction becomes our
addiction".
Lowry may have been British but, as far as Amis is
concerned, America is the home of the real thing. Besides Nabokov,
who lived there for a while, John Updike, Philip Roth, Don DeLillo
and Saul Bellow are his heroes (Iris Murdoch, Fay Weldon and Jane
Austen provide the book with a token female presence). The American
Eagle is a fond appreciation of Bellow's The Adventures of Augie
March. As usual, Amis is more interested in how the prose achieves
its effects rather than what those effects are. However, he does
point out that it is impossible to separate style and content: "they
come from the same place. And style is morality".
Amis's own style relies on iteration and
alliteration: "When poets die, there is usually a rush to judgment:
a revaluation, a retaliation - a reaction, anyway." He is a great
reviewer because he is never dull or humourless, because he backs up
his assertions with quotations, and always indulges in some good,
old-fashioned practical criticism. If Norman Mailer's "private
mental thesaurus", in Amis's view, reads "ego, bitch, blood,
obscenity, psyche, hip, soul, tears, risk, dare, danger, death",
then his own must read "brilliance, chaos, cliche, dazzle, fragile,
hard-edged, irony, jangle, literature, quiddity, superbity,
talent".
Praising V. S. Pritchett, Amis declares "all
artist-critics are to some extent secret proselytizers for their own
work; they are all secret agents". What better subject can there be
than yourself? The War Against Cliche cunningly and entertainingly
reveals how Amis and his fellow authors go about their subversive
art.
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Title The
War Against Cliche: Essays and Reviews, 1971-2000
Author Martin
Amis
Category Literature
Reviewer Mark
Sanderson
Date
Reviewed 08 April 2001
Publisher Jonathan
Cape
Date
Published 08 April 2001
Format Hardback
ISBN 0224050591
Buy this book
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