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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Bill said...

This sounds similar to the observations about DH Lawrence and his art - an almost-spiritual life dissipated (in a prior generation).

6 October 2016 at 18:27

Blogger pyrrhus said...

Agree that the Angry Young Men (from which I exempt Kingsley Amis) were pretty much a bust. BTW, I really liked two other Amis novels, The Green Man, and Take a Girl Like You....

6 October 2016 at 20:26

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

I think what most appealed to me about the Colin Wilson side of the angries; was the idea of having long, passionate conversations about existentialism in coffee bars.

6 October 2016 at 22:57

Blogger Mercurius Aulicus said...

I liked The Alteration (1976) - an alternative history novel set in a parallel universe in which the Reformation did not take place.

7 October 2016 at 02:46

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@pyrrhus and Mercurious - I have read Take a Girl (disliked it strongly!) and The Alteration (enjoyed it, moderately - and it stayed in my memory). But aside from those three I mention, none of Amis's work stimulated me to re-read - which is the test for me.

Actually, I have re-read some of his essays, memoirs and letters because they are so *very* funny. I suspect Colin Wilson did not really appreciate comic writing; but Amis was a master - some of his early letters to close friends like Larkin are as good as anything I have seen in terms of the exact use of words in humour.

Wilson quotes part of the kind of thing I mean - Amis is writing to Larkin of his fantasy of putting the whole Wordsworth circle: "in a big house, so they could not get out and be scalded to death with urine-steam".

Amis's casual writings are full of such stuff, which is far beyond most humourists - in this sense Amis was a bawdy and cynical version of PG Wodehouse, whose humour has the same source.

7 October 2016 at 06:01