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
(Page 4 of 5)
“I can imagine,” he says, “in a century or two that rule by women will be seen as a better bet than rule by men. What’s wrong with men is that they tend to look for the violent solution. Women don’t.”
“I was rereading Money,” I told him, “and there was one passage where John Self [the dissolute main character] says, ‘Everything about my relations with women has to do with the fact I can beat them up.’ The men in your novels are truly mystified by women. What do you think,” I asked him, “is the most mystifying thing about women?”
It was at this point—I’m not making this up—that footsteps are heard in the hall. Amis’ wife, Isabel, has come home; she’s a slender, attractive 50-year-old who looks like a grad student.
Amis greeted his wife and told her, “I’ve just been asked why men don’t understand women.”
“Oh, I’d better leave,” she says good-naturedly.
“I’ve just been reminded by Ron that John Self says [in Money] ‘The basic thing is that he can beat them up.’ So dear, I can beat you up,” he says mock-yobbishly, laughing although the outcome doesn’t seem entirely clear-cut to me.
She laughed too and said wryly, “I’ll meekly go make dinner.”
When she departed, a third Martin Amis emerged, one who had nothing to do with evil or bad behavior. The Amis who relishes the love he feels for his children and the greats of poetry.
“[When I talk] about love,” he said, “the positive value is always innocence.”
At the heart of the new novel, he told me, is an innocent couple in love and a threatened child.
“That’s what I seem to prize, the child or the ingénue, the less worldly characters. You can say that the world may not be getting worse—in a pinch you can say that. But it absolutely incontrovertibly is getting less innocent. You get the feeling that childhood does not last as long as it used to. Innocence gets harder to hold on to as the world gets older, as it accumulates more experience, more mileage and more blood on the tracks.
“Your youth evaporates in your early 40s when you look in the mirror. And then it becomes a full-time job pretending you’re not going to die, and then you accept that you’ll die. Then in your 50s everything is very thin. And then suddenly you’ve got this huge new territory inside you, which is the past, which wasn’t there before. A new source of strength. Then that may not be so gratifying to you as the 60s begin [Amis is 62], but then I find that in your 60s, everything begins to look sort of slightly magical again. And it’s imbued with a kind of leave-taking resonance, that it’s not going to be around very long, this world, so it begins to look poignant and fascinating.”
I particularly liked “the huge new territory” of the past and the “slightly magical” feel he evoked. Indeed, it reminded me of Shakespeare’s famous “seven ages of man” speech, with a tinge more optimism, and all the more impressive for having been delivered extemporaneously.
Finally we moved on to Philip Larkin, the great British poet who had been a friend to him, and his father, another celebrated and controversial novelist, Kingsley Amis. Martin had edited a selection of Larkin’s poems. I mentioned an essay I’d written about what I thought was Larkin’s single most affirmative line—in a body of work known for its lyric pessimism—the final line of “An Arundel Tomb”: “What will survive of us is love.”
A line that Larkin himself later questioned as being too romantic.
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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