The Anti-egotist: Kingsley Amis, Man of Letters"Fussell is a wonderful writer," according to The Washington Post Book World, "at once elegant and earthy." With such books as Wartime and The Great War and Modern Memory, he established a reputation as an incisive critic with a razor-tipped pen. Now Paul Fussell turns his attention to one of his own literary heroes, a man of similar acidic wit, Kingsley Amis. In The Anti-Egotist, Fussell captures the essence of Amis as a man of letters--"a serious critic," as John Gross writes, "operating outside the academic fold." Part biography, part critical appraisal, The Anti-Egotist traces the influences that have shaped Amis's writing, ranging from his schooldays through military service to university teaching, as he emerged as a novelist, poet, and essayist. By drawing our attention to the details first of Amis's life, then of his writing, Fussell reveals the profound moral sense that expresses itself so wonderfully in Amis's fiction and criticism. He mixes affection with insight as he paints a highly personal portrait of Amis as writer who despises self-promotion in all its forms, savaging the world's show-offs and blowhards with a particularly sharp-toothed bite. Amis's criticism, too, shook the British literary world with his "no-nonsense, can-the-bullshit tone," restoring skepticism and honesty to postwar English writing. Fussell guides us through Amis's immense output--portraying him as a book reviewer, custodian of language, gastronomic critic, anthologist, and poet--showing how his overriding concern is always for the public, deriding pretensions that come at a cost to the audience. And the power of Amis's writing, from his humor to his deft characterization, rings through in page after page of Fussell's accurate and evocative assessments. In recent years, Kingsley Amis has drawn considerable fire, thanks to his outspoken conservative opinions; many critics see him as little more than a crusty old curmudgeon. In The Anti-Egotist, Paul Fussell does the reading public a double favor in restoring the reputation of this important writer: he effortlessly captures the literary virtuosity that lifted Amis to fame, and he reveals the moral convictions that make this seeming curmudgeon more relevant than ever. |
Common terms and phrases
academic admirable American Amis Anthology Amis Collection Amis notes Amis says Amis's Anthony Powell Anti-Death League army artistic Auden Austen behavior Betjeman bottle British Cambridge character Collected Poems comic course critic culture D. H. Lawrence delightful drink Dylan Thomas editor Edmund Blunden egotism English literature essay example favorite feel fiction finally funny Housman human inner audience intellectual interest Jake's Thing Jane Austen John kind Kingsley Amis language Larkin learned letters light verse literary Lolita London look Lucky Jim mean Memoirs modern Modernist moral never notice novelist novels observes once Oxford Book perhaps Philip Larkin pleasure poet poetic poetry reader Reprinted by permission restaurant Review Robert Conquest Rosten satire says Amis seems sense snobbery social sort style Swansea T. S. Eliot talent taste there's thesis things tion turn Victorian Waugh what's wife wine women words writing young