Martin Amis Contemplates Evil
England’s most famous living novelist has moved to America—and tilted the literary world
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
Here’s Martin Amis, one of the most celebrated and controversial novelists of our time, comfortably ensconced in an elegantly restored vintage Brooklyn brownstone, having just moved with his family from London to the United States, to the neighborhood with the endearingly Dickensian name of Cobble Hill. Many in the U.K., especially those who have read Lionel Asbo, his viciously satiric new novel that is subtitled State of England, have taken his move to America as a bitter farewell to the U.K., a land that has become, if you read the new work, dominated by sinister yobs (U.K. slang for vulgar, often violent bullies) and an ignorant, toxic tabloid- and porno-obsessed culture.
Amis has said the move had more to do with his wife, the novelist Isabel Fonseca, wanting to be near her American family. Still, he’s remarked to one interviewer that Americans should spend three or four hours a day just thanking their good fortune for being here. And indeed at this beautiful springtime twilight moment in bucolic brownstone Brooklyn it would be hard to fault his choice.
And yet, today in North America, the day of my visit, was the day when the U.S. tabloids featured a terrifying fellow who came to be called “the bath salts cannibal”—bath salts being the street name for some toxic designer drug—who had bizarrely and savagely chewed off the face of a homeless man in Florida. (Later reports questioned the nature of the drug involved.) A second cannibal was reported to be on the loose in Maryland, and someone was sending body parts through the mail in Canada.
And just as there are two Americas evident today—civilized, bucolic Brooklyn and the frenzied bath salts wasteland of the tabs—so it might be said there are two Martin Amises. There is Amis the author of vicious, often outrageous comic satiric novels like Lionel Asbo and Money (one of the most exhilarating reading experiences in recent literature, the great American novel that happened to be writ by a Brit; think of it as The Great Gatsby on bath salts), as well as London Fields and The Information (a genius send-up of the literary world that contains perhaps the funniest scenes in any novel I’ve read since Catch-22).
And then there’s the Other Amis, the one who dominates our conversation this evening, the one who writes books that go beyond Bad Behavior to contemplate Evil Itself. These include the Holocaust novel, Time’s Arrow, his two books about Stalinism—the gulag novel House of Meetings and Koba the Dread, his scathing short biographical essay on Stalin and the mass murders committed under his rule—as well as Einstein’s Monsters (if you consider nuclear annihilation evil) and his controversial series of essays about 9/11, The Second Plane.
Shortly after we settle into his living room with a couple of cold Coronas, I ask Amis about an offhand remark he’d made in a U.K. Telegraph interview, saying he was thinking of returning to the subject of the Holocaust in his next novel.
“Yeah,” he replied. “I’m actually 50 pages in.” His return to the subject came from a feeling, he said, “that in the very palpable, foreseeable future the Holocaust is going to absent itself from living memory.” The survivors’ testimonies will endure in print and on video, but their physical disappearance from life will mark a symbolic divide.
I mention that some recent American commenters have called continued consideration of the historical relevance of the Holocaust a sign of being “Holocaust obsessed”—a slur that I believe represents a new form of Holocaust denial.
Amis’ reaction: “I agree with W.G. Sebald [the prominent German novelist], who said, ‘No serious person ever thinks about anything else.’”
He added, “I’m just amazed by the exceptionalism.”
The question of the Holocaust’s exceptionalism is one that I find fascinating, and wrote about in a book called Explaining Hitler: Is Hitler on the continuum of other evildoers in history, on the far end of a spectrum, or does he represent something off the grid, beyond the continuum, an “exceptionalist” phenomenon, in a rarefied realm of radical evil all his own?
“It’s certainly exceptional in my case,” Amis continued, “in that it didn’t matter how much I read about it, I felt I was getting no nearer to understanding it,” the nature of Hitler’s evil.
“That was not the case with the Russian holocaust,” he says, despite body count figures for Stalin’s mass murders that exceed Hitler’s.
He tells me that until recently the problem of understanding Hitler had bedeviled him. And then, “I was reading a passage at the end of the companion volume to If This Is a Man by Primo Levi,” one of the most widely admired writers and thinkers among Holocaust survivors. “It’s where he answers the questions that he’s most often quoted on. And one of the questions is, ‘Do you feel you understand that level of racial hatred?’ and Levi replied, ‘No I don’t understand it and nor should you understand it, but it’s a sacred duty not to understand,’ and that to understand something is to subsume it within yourself and we can’t do that.
“That, that, was an epiphany for me,” Amis says, “reading those lines. And I thought ‘Ah.’ Then as soon as the pressure to understand left me, I felt I could [write]. I could understand two or three things that perhaps hadn’t been very emphasized.”
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Comments (6)
Ron Rosenbaum's discussion about evil with Martin Amis in the September issue suggests that Amis maintains some hope for humanity. He has to be a determined optimistic. Possibly more realistic were two thinkers of more than a century ago. Sometime in the late 1890s, William S. Gilbert, the Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan of light opera fame, looked at the world around him and didn’t like what he saw. “Man is nature’s sole mistake,” he concluded. Ten or so years later Wilfred Trotter, a British surgeon and pioneer in neurosurgery, wrote a book on group psychology, Instincts of the Herd in Peace and War, and included in it the same opinion, that “after all, man will prove but one more of Nature’s failures.” If Gilbert and Trotter could see the world of 2012, they might come to the same conclusion. Humans have existed for about 200,000 years, and in those 200,000 years the 7 billion of us now on the planet still haven’t figured out how to act in our own best long-range interests, nor learned how harmful violence is to those long-range interests. Bob Schmidt Sacramento, California
Posted by Bob Schmidt on October 25,2012 | 06:08 PM
Levi is desperately wrong: "...and Levi replied, ‘No I don’t understand it and nor should you understand it, but it’s a sacred duty not to understand,’ and that to understand something is to subsume it within yourself and we can’t do that. Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/Martin-Amis-Contemplates-Evil-165590986.html#ixzz27hKr9Dks Then one cannot understand the homosexual, the atheist, the pro lifers or the pro choicers or the culture of the native... the unwillingness to understand denies the humanity of the people and separated the person from those weaker people... what one understands does not remove choice or responsibility. I don't know that I understand HItler, but I think I can, and Malcolm X and George Bush Mother Theresa my daughter and my son and my lover and you. Careful: Primo is a great man, a unique man, with experiences that can barely be considered in the dimension of the living... but he is wrong here, and he would recognize that error. He would tell you "ooops... that sounded a whole lot better than it was."
Posted by gberke on September 27,2012 | 03:02 PM
A darn good interview by Rosenbaum. Welcome to the USA, Martin! He's just the sort of guy we need after the passing of his friend Christopher Hitchens. The latter of course is irreplaceable but Amis has an equivalent non conformity that should shake up American intellectual lethargy. We should be honored that both of these creative spirits chose to live in America. And thank the UK for not appreciating either adequately. Once again we see how one of the strengths of our country is its ability to attract talent from afar.
Posted by james dalglish on September 10,2012 | 12:11 AM
He lost me at Canadian geese.
Posted by gene on September 7,2012 | 02:02 PM
How does Ron Rosenbaum write about Primo Levi as being a Holocaust survivor, and not write that he died by suicide? Even Elie Wiesel commented that Levi "died in the... camps" upon Levi's passing. This is an important omission when discussing the subject of the Holocaust in any article.
Posted by Helene Glanzberg on September 5,2012 | 12:41 PM
Amis appreciates the ways in which the US is different from the UK. But the politics he likes are the ones that made the UK what he does not like, and he supports the same politics here. thanks to leftwingers like him, the west is dying. Soon there will be no place to go, no refuge.
Posted by Edie on September 4,2012 | 09:52 AM