Windsor Star

HOW BOOK-SMART ARE YOU?

Paging all readers: See how well you perform on this wide-ranging literary quiz

- IONA MCLAREN and ORLANDO BIRD

Feeling sharp? Test your wits against our literary quiz: BOOKS 2018

1. Will Self told an interviewe­r he always reads more than one book at a time. But how many? a)5 b) 15 c) 50 2. Who won the 2018 Bad Sex in Fiction Award with a passage that includes the line: “We’re both moaning eyes hearts souls bodies one”? a) James Frey b) Jilly Cooper c) Haruki Murakami 3. How did this year’s Booker Prize winner, Anna Burns, say she is going to spend her prize money? a) A vacation b) Paying off her debts c) Curtains 4. Which of these, according to Michael Wolff in Fire and Fury, is U.S. President Donald Trump’s favourite fast food chain? a) McDonald’s b) Burger King c) Taco Bell 5. You’ve almost certainly been told to watch Killing Eve, starring Canada’s Sandra Oh. But who wrote the books on which the series is based? a) Philip Kerr b) Luke Jennings c) Kate Atkinson

ONLY CONNECT

1. At Eton, George Orwell was taught by another major 20thcentur­y writer-in-the-making, and remembered him as completely incompeten­t. Who was it? a) T.S. Eliot b) Aldous Huxley c) Evelyn Waugh 2. Which of these literary critics gave evidence at the Lady Chatterley trial? a) Helen Gardner b) F.R. Leavis c) William Empson 3. Can you name the famous literary parent of these daughters? a) Lisa Jardine b) Shirley Williams c) Mary Shelley 4. Which of these U.S. poets did NOT visit Ezra Pound in the asylum at St. Elizabeths in Washington. D.C.? a) William Carlos Williams b) Elizabeth Bishop c) Robert Lowell d) Sylvia Plath e) T.S. Eliot

HATCHET JOBS

Here are some writers at their most acid. But whose books were they trashing ?

1. Samuel Johnson: “There is no nature, for there is no truth; there is no art, for there is nothing new. Its form is that of a pastoral, easy, vulgar, and therefore disgusting: whatever images it can supply are long ago exhausted.”

2. D.H. Lawrence: “Nothing but old fags and cabbage-stumps of quotations from the Bible and the rest, stewed in the juice of deliberate, journalist­ic dirty-mindedness.”

3. Virginia Woolf: “Not a good novel. All raw, uncooked, protesting.”

4. Ed Zern, reviewing in Field and Stream, 1959: “This fictional account of the day-to-day life of an English gamekeeper is still of considerab­le interest to outdoor-minded readers, as it contains many passages on pheasant raising, the apprehendi­ng of poachers, ways to control vermin and other duties of the profession­al gamekeeper. Unfortunat­ely one is obliged to wade through many pages of extraneous material in order to discover and savour these sidelights on the management of a Midland shooting estate, and in this reviewer’s opinion this book cannot take the place of J.R. Miller’s Practical Gamekeepin­g.”

5. Norman Mailer: “At certain points, reading the work can even be said to resemble the act of making love to a three-hundred-pound woman. Once she gets on top, it’s over. Fall in love, or be asphyxiate­d.”

6. Auberon Waugh: “As an early upmarket soap, it undoubtedl­y gave comfort to a number of people, becoming something of a cult during the (1950s) in the London community of expatriate Australian­s. Perhaps it afforded them the illusion of understand­ing English society, even a vicarious sense of belonging to it. If so, it was one of the cruellest practical jokes ever played by a Welshman.”

7. Truman Capote: “[It] isn’t writing at all — it’s typing.”

8. Martin Amis: “Epic in length only; it has no pace, no drive. An anthology, an agglomerat­ion, it simply accrues. The question ‘What happens next?’ has no meaning, because there is no next … there is only more.”

THE YOUNG ONES

1. Ages 4 to 6, which childhood affliction is thought to have stunted Alexander Pope’s growth? a) Lyme disease b) Pott’s disease c) Hypothyroi­dism 2. As a teenager, Jane Austen wrote an epistolary story called which of these? a) Love and Friendship b) Conversati­ons with Friends c) Tale of Two Friends 3. One of T.S. Eliot’s ancestors emigrated to the U.S. in the 17th century from which English village, also the title of a poem in Four Quartets? a) Combe Florey b) Little Gidding c) East Coker

4. In John Updike’s Rabbit novels, which sport did the protagonis­t, Harry Angstrom, play at school? a) Baseball b) Football c) Basketball BRITS ABROAD (AND THE IRISH AT HOME) Can you match the descriptio­n of place to the writer?

1. Taormina: “One long parade of junk shops … things dearer than ever, more faked, food tiresome as it always was. If only Etna would send down 60,000,000 tons of boiling lava over the place and cauterize it away.”

2. Genoa: “The view, as I have said, is charming; but in the day you must keep the lattice-blinds close shut, or the sun would drive you mad; and when the sun goes down you must shut up all the windows, or the mosquitoes would tempt you to commit suicide. So at this time of the year, you don’t see much of the prospect within doors. As for the flies, you don’t mind them. Nor the fleas, whose size is prodigious, and whose name is Legion, and who populate the coach-house to that extent that I daily expect to see the carriage going off bodily, drawn by myriads of industriou­s fleas in harness.”

3. Damascus: “Great cities paint pictures, Cairo a pyramid, Shiraz a rose. Damascus conjures running water, a river out of Lebanon which carries down calcareous soil and smears it over the desert for 170 square miles, giving birth to a miracle of trees.”

4. Dublin: “Looked at closely, the bricks of these houses showed in fact a variety of colours, some purplish red, some yellowish grey, all glued together by a jelly of filth to form a uniform organic surface rather like the scales of a fish, the basic material of Dublin, a city conjured from the earth all in one piece by some tousled Dido.”

5. Scotland: “The masters of the fairest and most wealthy climates of the globe turned with contempt from gloomy hills, assailed by the winter tempest, from lakes concealed in a blue mist, and from cold and lonely heaths, over which the deer of the forest were chased by a troop of naked barbarians.” a) Colin Thubron b) Edward Gibbon c) Charles Dickens d) Iris Murdoch e) D.H. Lawrence

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN ?? Anna Burns accepts the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 2018, and indicates she has big plans for the prize money. Did her plans include a vacation, debt repayment or new curtains?
FRANK AUGSTEIN Anna Burns accepts the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 2018, and indicates she has big plans for the prize money. Did her plans include a vacation, debt repayment or new curtains?
 ??  ?? James Frey
James Frey

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