{"id":170863,"date":"2025-05-22T10:35:49","date_gmt":"2025-05-22T14:35:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=170863"},"modified":"2025-06-16T10:08:39","modified_gmt":"2025-06-16T14:08:39","slug":"the-matter-of-martin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2025\/05\/22\/the-matter-of-martin\/","title":{"rendered":"The Matter of Martin"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_170864\" style=\"width: 1034px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-170864\" class=\"size-full wp-image-170864\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/martin-amis-in-a-chair.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1024\" height=\"685\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/martin-amis-in-a-chair.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/martin-amis-in-a-chair-300x201.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/05\/martin-amis-in-a-chair-768x514.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-170864\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Martin Amis poses for a photo in his North London home on Oct. 18, 2005. Courtesy of Writer Pictures\/Graham Jepson, via AP Images.<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201cThey\u2019re waiting for an autograph from Salman Rushdie,\u201d the man behind me explained. After everything he\u2019s been through. People were gathering behind a barricade at a door of the 92nd Street Y, down the block from the one where I stood waiting for &#8220;A Celebration of Martin Amis.&#8221; A couple of minutes passed, during which time the man behind me also decided to tell me that he thought the attempt on Donald Trump\u2019s life seemed staged. Then the actual Salman Rushdie arrived at our door, wearing a tan Yankees cap, and walked right in, unbothered by fans. Suspicious of my line mate\u2019s sense of the nature of the assassination attempt and his suggestion that the crowd was there for a novelist, I excused myself and went to investigate. A woman at the barricade said they were there for <em>Murderbot<\/em>. (This, I gathered from Google later, is an action-comedy TV series.)<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A literary writer in 2025 may not pull throngs of fans hanging off a barricade the way an action comedy TV series can. But the crowd passing through the lobby of the 92nd Street Y, there to hear a set of distinguished writers talk about Amis, was indeed soon in the hundreds. Martin Amis, whom Geoff Dyer once <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/books\/2023\/may\/21\/martin-amis-geoff-dyer-british-novels-dies\">called<\/a> the \u201cMick Jagger of literature,\u201d was among our last great literary celebrities. Along with his crew of London writer friends\u2014which included Christopher Hitchens, Ian McEwan, and Rushdie\u2014Amis moved like a star, back when writers (I\u2019m told) commanded that kind of public attention.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In the lobby, some attendees self-identified as Amis diehards: Paige McGreevy, who works at the United Nations, remembered being eighteen in Barcelona, staying out until six in the morning, sleeping all day in her blackout-shaded room, and then waking up and inhaling <em>Money <\/em>in bed. The novelist Julian Tepper recalled with a cringe the time he approached Amis at a <small>PEN<\/small> gala and did the whole \u201cMr. Amis, I just wanted to say\u2014\u201d thing. Another <em>Money<\/em> fan, Emilie Meyer, who said she was a friend of the Amis family&#8217;s, marveled at the way its protagonist combines piggishness with a nimble, pixielike wit. Meyer is a bookseller at Aeon Bookstore, and she often recommends Amis\u2019s work to people who come in seeking books for a vacation\u2014that way, she explained, they will always remember it as the trip when they read Amis.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Emilie is twenty-five. Most of the other young people in the crowd were there with groups from M.F.A. programs. Both the New School and NYU, I was told, arranged for tickets. Some of the students hadn\u2019t read much\u2014or any\u2014Amis, but all seemed pleased to be there. Most of the attendees were closer to Amis\u2019s age, and some were from his milieu. Anna Wintour entered; this being the second Monday of May, she was available. She sat down in the auditorium not far from literary agent Andrew Wylie, who represented Amis from the mid-nineties on. (Wintour, who also attended Amis\u2019s London memorial service in 2023, goes way back with Amis; in their London youths, she <a href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/news-and-politics\/2011\/12\/christopher-hitchens-death-anna-wintour-on-what-her-old-friend-hitchens-loved-most.html\">dated<\/a> his great friend the Hitch.)<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A few rows back from them, I chatted with Hugo Guinness, another pal of Amis&#8217;s from those days, who fondly recalled tennis games and \u201clots of drinking.\u201d Novelists were still cool and glamorous then, he said; playwrights too. He and his wife, the painter Elliott Puckette, had also attended the London memorial. This event, as the speakers soon made clear, was the New York version of that service.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The event was billed as a \u201ccelebration,\u201d and I didn\u2019t quite know what that would mean. I was thinking maybe a panel, perhaps some group discussion of his books. Instead a procession of venerated writers stood behind a lectern to deliver what were effectively eulogies; it was a celebration of life, two years after Amis\u2019s death. Isabel Fonseca, Amis\u2019s wife, reflected in gracious opening remarks on Amis\u2019s recurrent interest in the theme of aging. She noted that he was searing on each stage of life, including old age, though he \u201chardly touched his own.\u201d The speakers shared tender anecdotes about \u201cMartin.\u201d Jeffrey Eugenides, who spoke after Fonseca, noted that Amis was actually a \u201csweetheart\u201d who\u2019d gone to the trouble of shipping his daughter\u2019s stuffed animal, left behind at Amis\u2019s rental house in Brazil; cigarette ash was stuck to the stamps. (That the speakers noted that Amis could be tender did not surprise me: Anyone who has read Amis\u2019s writing about children, not to mention the boundless sorrow of losing his cousin Lucy Partington, the victim of a brutal murder, suspects this.) Lorrie Moore described how he aged gracefully from an <em>enfant terrible<\/em>, recalling the handful of times she encountered him. She said, intriguingly, that money in his work functioned as a \u201cLa Brea Tar Pit of the soul.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">People shared snippets of conversation and memories, praised his style and personal qualities, and read long passages from Amis\u2019s work. It was during these readings that the biggest laughs came. Amis writing about himself is probably funnier than most people could be about him. (Though it was also very funny when Fonseca said that to crack open a Martin Amis book is to wonder, \u201cWhen will something truly horrible and humiliating happen to this man, or this woman?\u201d) A. M. Homes read the opening of <em>The Rachel Papers<\/em>, and Jennifer Egan read from <em>The Information, <\/em>Amis\u2019s great tale of literary rivalry and flailing. Nathan Heller was the only speaker who had never met Amis: \u201cI knew him as a writer, which is the way I suspect writers would most like to be known.\u201d He spoke to and for the many of us who also knew Amis only through his work\u2014those of us pulled to the event by the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/interviews\/1156\/the-art-of-fiction-no-151-martin-amis\">Nabokovian throb of <\/a><a href=\"http:\/\/recognition.of\/\">recognition<\/a>. Of all the speakers, Heller best captured, and reenacted, Amis\u2019s sheer sense of wonder and glee about literature. One pleasure of reading Amis is the electricity of his alertness to the world: Heller described him as writing realism with \u201cthe saturation turned up.\u201d Recalling the \u201cecstatic snicker\u201d that comes from reading both Martin and Kingsley Amis\u2014this \u201csomatic line of literary happiness\u201d\u2014Heller reminded us that reading Amis is fun. Murmurs of how great Heller was circulated in my section.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Overall, the tone of the speeches was reverent\u2014appropriate, probably, to the occasion. Still, Amis was a writer who ventured gleefully beyond the bounds of good taste. Rushdie, who <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=lA5VlAfXTS0\">closed out the evening<\/a>, recounted the cheeky word games they used to play; in one, they replaced the word <em>Love<\/em> in titles with the words <em>Hysterical Sex<\/em>, to get to &#8220;Hysterical Sex in the Time of Cholera&#8221; and things like that. A close friend of Amis&#8217;s, he shared his regret, his voice almost breaking, that he never properly got to say goodbye. \u201cSo I\u2019ll say it now,\u201d he concluded. \u201cGoodbye, Martin. And I send you a lot of hysterical sex.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Amis\u2019s work was the focus of the event. But Amis was interested in life\u2014his own, and those of the writers he examined in his parallel career as a critic. As the critic Parul Sehgal (who cohosts a terrific podcast on Amis called <em>The Martin Chronicles<\/em>) <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2020\/10\/20\/books\/review-martin-amis-inside-story.html\">wrote<\/a> in 2020: \u201cThe hallmark of his own literary criticism is his interest in the pressures that life and art exert on each other.\u201d His own life seemed to exert much. He was not a hermit type. He had a rich world\u2014relationships, children, tennis matches, vexed paternal relations, feuds, spats, dental work (sorry!). Amis ran headlong into the mix, as any satirist, arguably any writer, should. He <a href=\"https:\/\/slate.com\/culture\/2002\/08\/martin-amis-swings-at-stalin-and-hits-his-own-best-friend-instead.html\">went after<\/a> Hitchens in print, who <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/magazine\/archive\/2002\/09\/lightness-at-midnight\/376642\/\">went after<\/a> him in turn. He defended himself vigorously against claims that his major dental surgery was cosmetic, and friends did the same, for example in a ten-page <em>New Yorker<\/em> <a href=\"https:\/\/archives.newyorker.com\/newyorker\/1995-03-06\/flipbook\">spread<\/a>\u2014covering the oral surgery, a massive book advance, and his falling-out with Julian Barnes and Pat Kavanagh\u2014which appeared in 1995, a few months before I was born. One critic, Rushdie told the magazine, \u201cbehaved disgracefully badly in the matter of Martin.\u201d But on Monday, none of this came up. The asterisk that sometimes hovers over conversations among young people today about his work (yes, the portrayals of women aren\u2019t always great, but &#8230; and yes, he was sort of controversial, but &#8230;) were absent too. That\u2019s okay: it was, after all, a celebration. It was all very pleasant for the man who, in the eighties, became the <a href=\"https:\/\/archive.nytimes.com\/www.nytimes.com\/books\/98\/02\/01\/home\/amis-stout.html?mobile-app=true&amp;theme=wiki\">face<\/a> of what one critic called the \u201cnew unpleasantness.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Amis\u2019s writing is stylish and screwy and grotesque and vulgar. The jokes come at an unhinged pace. He was an exquisite writer of the male body and the horrors of inhabiting one: \u201cMy hair hung on my head as if it were a cut-price toup\u00e9e,\u201d Charles Highway (Charles Highway!) reflects in Amis\u2019s debut novel <em>The Rachel Papers<\/em>. That same character savages the \u201cBig Boys\u201d that are his pimples and speaks of \u201claundering my orifices,\u201d as \u201cthey went all to hell if not scrupulously maintained.\u201d A genital region is referred to as a \u201crig.\u201d The names, across his books, are insane. Amis calls characters things like Spunk, 13, Fart Klaeber, Sod. A female cop (or as she calls herself \u201ca police\u201d) is named Mike Hoolihan. A quartet of violent dogs are Joe, Joel, Jeff, and Jon. That he called a writer-character Martin Amis, or so the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2000\/06\/19\/family-romance-3\">story goes<\/a>, caused his father to throw <em>Money<\/em> across the room. Famed for his antic satire, he was later unafraid to take on\u2014in his novels, nonfiction, and short stories\u2014genocide and the end of the world, too.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">No one is doing it like Amis did. That the contemporary fiction landscape lacks his flavor of frenzied humor, chaotic storylines, maximalist characters, and full-throated play is a loss. But perhaps that\u2019s how it should be, especially for a critic who <a href=\"https:\/\/martinchronicles.buzzsprout.com\/1977710\/episodes\/15332492-the-war-against-cliche\">championed writers<\/a> whose work could not be mistaken for anyone\u2019s but their own. He was an influence\u2014the 92nd Street Y is planning more events featuring young writers affected by Amis\u2014but he was also singular. Perhaps his legacy, more than inspiring copycats, will be to have opened up a sense of freedom, a sense that, yes, you really can do what you want.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The auditorium in the 92nd Street Y\u2019s Unterberg Poetry and Literature Center has the names of a handful of famous writers and thinkers emblazoned on the walls. I was amused to note that directly to the right of where I sat, the wall read <small>SHAKESPEARE<\/small>. Amis was fascinated by, and irreverent toward, the Bard of Avon. In <em>The Rachel Papers<\/em>, young Highway suggests that Shakespeare had it easy because he could just wrap things up with a wedding; far harder to make it through the narrative muck of twentieth-century relationships. And one of the all-time Amis passages, for me, is John Self\u2019s close analysis in <em>Money<\/em> of a portrait of Shakespeare: \u201cThe beaked and bumfluffed upper lip, the oafish swelling of the jawline, the granny\u2019s rockpool eyes. And that rug! Isn\u2019t it a killer?\u201d (A rug, in Amisese, refers to a head of hair.) Shakespeare, to the comfort of our hero, \u201clooked like shit.\u201d Amis, who mocked literary giants, nonetheless betrayed in his journalism, and in the frequent references to great writers in his novels, an awe for the stars that preceded him\u2014though he never stopped denigrating playwrights, whom he suggested, in his memoir <em>Experience<\/em>, were knighted far too much. \u201cIt is very funny that Shakespeare was a playwright,\u201d he wrote. (Amis was himself knighted posthumously in 2023.)<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">After the speeches, everyone filed back onstage for a charming farewell. No one took a bow. It was not a performance, not really. In the lobby, I chatted with a couple of members of the extended Amis\u2013Fonseca family, one of whom observed that Amis talked like he wrote. The evening, they concluded, had felt authentic.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Amis showed, even early in life, a canny awareness of his own image (one doesn\u2019t become a literary Mick Jagger by accident) and both his capacity and his inability to shape it. In a letter to his father and his then-stepmother Elizabeth Jane Howard, ahead of his Oxford interview, a teenage Amis wonders: \u201cShall I be refreshingly different, stolidly middle-brow, engagingly na\u00efve, candidly matter-of-fact, contemptuously sophisticated, incorruptibly sincere, sonorously pedantic, curiously fickle, youthfully wide-eyed? Should I bow my head in solemn appreciation of the hallowed atmosphere of learning? Should I play the profound truth-seeker, the seedy anti-hero, the crusty society-observer, the all-discerning beauty-appreciator?\u201d Fair questions, all. But his conclusion, touching and wise, is: \u201cNo, I suppose I shall end up \u2026 just \u2026 being\u2026\u2026 myself.\u201d Himself he seemed to stay.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Amis\u2019s friends and readers last week, looking at his life, did not attempt holistic description of who he became. In his criticism, Amis sometimes <a href=\"https:\/\/www.newyorker.com\/magazine\/2018\/02\/05\/martin-amis-style-supremacist\">quoted<\/a> at length from the writers he reviewed. I am not reviewing Amis, of course. But in the spirit of skimming inspiration from him, I will end with a passage from <em>Experience<\/em> about the trouble with life and the structure of it all:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The trouble with life (the novelist will feel) is its amorphousness, its ridiculous fluidity. Look at it: thinly plotted, largely themeless, sentimental and ineluctably trite. The dialogue is poor, or at least violently uneven. The twists are either predictable or sensationalist. And it\u2019s always the same beginning; and the same ending.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Lora Kelley is a writer who lives in Brooklyn.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cSalman Rushdie, who closed out the evening, recounted the cheeky word games they used to play; in one, they replaced the word Love in titles with the words Hysterical Sex, to get to \u2018Hysterical Sex in the Time of Cholera\u2019 and things like that.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2594,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[68551],"tags":[67827],"class_list":["post-170863","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-dispatch","tag-featured"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Matter of Martin by Lora Kelley<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"May 22, 2025 \u2013 \u201cSalman Rushdie, who closed out the evening, recounted the cheeky word games they used to play; 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