My Martin Amis  By  cover art

My Martin Amis

By: Jack Aldane
  • Summary

  • Personal stories from writers, critics and publicists about the life and legacy of late English novelist Martin Amis (1949-2023).



    Host and producer: Jack Aldane

    Music: 'June' by Nigel Martin

    Twitter: @mymartinamis


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Jack Aldane
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Episodes
  • "When he died, I was distraught. Only Amis could have that effect on me." Will Lloyd
    May 21 2024

    Reporter for The Sunday Times Will Lloyd sits down with Jack Aldane on this ninth episode to discuss The Second Plane, a collection of twelve pieces of nonfiction and two short stories by Amis published in 2008, covering 9/11, the age of terrorism, Islamism and the follies of the Blair-Bush coalition.


    Will says Amis should be remembered as one of the greatest comic novelists ever to write in English. However, he adds that had the author remembered this himself when it counted, The Second Plane would probably never have been written.


    The Second Plane shows what can happen to a writer when seismic events combine with the weight of expectation to explain them in real time. When the World Trade Center is attacked on 11 September 2001, Amis does not report from the ground, nor speak to those who witness the event firsthand. Instead, he along with other members of the literary elite are conscripted to tell the Anglophone world what it all means.


    Some confess in their columns to being poleaxed by what they’ve seen. Amis instead uses his adrenaline to tame and name the collective moment with signature bombast. But this is not John Self’s New York, and Amis is unusually way off the mark.


    Will explains why The Second Plane is arguably a literary parallel of the Iraq War. For one thing, the same errors of conjecture and righteous zeal are noticeable throughout.


    Like so many cultural and political thought leaders of his time, Amis went over the top only to discover that he was woefully out of his depth.


    FOLLOW US ON TWITTER/ X: @mymartinamis


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    49 mins
  • "Reading Money was like hearing The Clash for the first time." Graham Caveney
    Mar 25 2024

    Journalist and memoirist Graham Caveney speaks to Jack Aldane on this eighth episode of the series about Martin Amis's iconoclastic fifth novel Money: A Suicide Note.


    He and the host discuss the novel's true subject, which runs counter to popular interpretation. Though Money is often celebrated as the quintessential novel of the 80s, Caveney argues it is as much if not predominantly a story about the 60s, of which the 80s was arguably the last, lurid hurrah.


    And of course, they discuss the novel’s protagonist John Self, who shows what happens when yobbish machismo meets a culture of convenience and excess, and whose farcical downfall makes Money an early diagnosis of the human condition under neoliberalism.


    Caveney explains the novel's impact on his generation. By the closing decades of the 20th century, he says, aspirant writers in the UK were resigned to thinking about the English novel as a relic of the pre-war era. With the American canon at the helm, Britain was losing its voice in contemporary fiction. By writing Money Amis single-handed tore up the rulebook, proving that it was once more possible for English writers to take on the zeitgeist with originality and authority. For Caveney, Money was a cultural watershed on par with the greatest seminal moments in modern music.


    FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @mymartinamis


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    45 mins
  • "Amis is at his best when he leans into his fears." Leo Robson
    Feb 26 2024

    Leo Robson is a freelance writer whose work has featured in The New Yorker, Harpers and New Statesman, among others.


    In this episode, he and the series' host and producer Jack Aldane sit down to discuss Martin Amis's fourth novel Other People, a Mystery Story, published in 1981.


    Robson explains that Amis had many literary debts his fans can take pleasure in exploring, and that the novelist, much like his father Kingsley, wrote in order to manage his fears and anxieties about the turbulence of the 20th century.


    The taxonomies Amis used to organise the world, from the largest elemental forms (Time, Death, Sex, Money), to the minutiae of existence, were arguably his coping strategy, Robson says, and one he wielded brilliantly.


    Though his "centurion confidence" as a writer could grate, he adds, Amis gifted his readers a way to see the world afresh, to take it in slowly and carefully, and to use some of that same confidence to marvel and laugh at its darkest features.


    FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @mymartinamis




    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    34 mins

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