Guests: Martin Amis RSS

2011:

  1. Writers on Writing
    Writers on Writing

    with Martin Amis, Fran Lebowitz, Zadie Smith and more on Mar 3, 2011

    Duration
    14 min
    Comments
    1 comment
    Rating
    * * * * *

2010:

  1. Author Martin Amis
    Author Martin Amis

    with Martin Amis on Aug 11, 2010

    Duration
    36 min
    Comments
    5 comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2007:

  1. A conversation with author Martin Amis
    Duration
    30 min
    Comments
    7 comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2003:

  1. A conversation with novelist Martin Amis
    Duration
    27 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

2000:

  1. A conversation with Martin Amis
    Duration
    29 min
    Comments
    2 comments
    Rating
    * * * *

1999:

  1. A conversation with novelists Elmore Leonard and Martin Amis
    Duration
    35 min
    Comments
    1 comment
    Rating
    * * * * *

1998:

  1. A conversation with British novelist Martin Amis
    Duration
    17 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *
  2. A conversation with novelist Martin Amis
    Duration
    29 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

1995:

  1. A discussion with Martin Amis
    Duration
    60 min
    Comments
    Rating
    * * * *

Martin Amis is a English novelist. He is the author of some of Britain’s best-known modern literature, particularly “Money” (1986) and “London Fields” (1989), and the creator of several of fiction’s most memorable characters since Charles Dickens.

Influenced by Saul Bellow, Vladimir Nabokov, and James Joyce, as well as by his father Sir Kingsley Amis, he has inspired a generation of writers with his distinctive style, including Will Self and Zadie Smith. The Guardian writes that “[a]ll his critics have noted what Kingsley Amis complained of as a ‘terrible compulsive vividness in his style … that constant demonstrating of his command of English’; and it’s true that the Amis-ness of Amis will be recognisable in any piece before he reaches his first full stop.”

Amis’s raw material is what he sees as the absurdity of the postmodern condition and the excesses of late-capitalist Western society with its grotesque caricatures. He is thus sometimes portrayed as the undisputed master of what “The New York Times” has called “the new unpleasantness.”

Source- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Amis