The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Both a readers’ and writers’ writer, the late Martin Amis was in a league of his own

Influentia­l novelist helped define an era and his stunning prose has seldom been rivalled

- Chris Deerin ≤ Chris Deerin is a leading journalist and commentato­r who heads independen­t, non-party think tank, Reform Scotland

Martin Amis sentenced me to life – or, more accurately, he sentenced me back to life. In my early 20s, I was a once voracious consumer of novels who had lost my appetite and effectivel­y stopped reading. A clever friend pushed a copy of Amis’s Money into my hands, promising something like: “This’ll sort you out.”

Man, did it. I had never come across anything like Amis’s Money, or Money’s Amis. I hadn’t known prose could be so alive, so electrifie­d, so electrifyi­ng, how sharply and elegantly and powerfully the English language could be made to perform in the service of its user. Amis was a ringmaster, effortless­ly controllin­g high-wire acrobats and pirouettin­g ballerinas on horseback and roaring tigers.

From Money: “We don’t really go that far into other people, even when we think we do. We hardly ever go in and bring them out. We just stand at the jaws of the cave, and strike a match…” Glorious.

Amis cast me into literature’s deep ocean, with heightened expectatio­ns for nouns and verbs and adverbs. From Money, again, a hired tux in a hot New York theatre produces “an impressive­ly candid odor… not one smell but a deadly anthology of fatso emanations.” He performed tricks that were so supple and alluring, they felt barely legal.

For me and Martin Amis, that was it: the connection was instant, and unbreakabl­e. It will endure beyond the unexpected and upsetting announceme­nt on Saturday of his death. At 73, the same age as his father Kingsley. Of oesophagea­l cancer, the same disease that killed his closest friend Christophe­r Hitchens in 2011. Too much coincidenc­e, Martin, or just enough?

That’s the kind of question I ask him on a regular basis. We never met, you understand, but he has spent decades in my head, a languid yet stern dominie, sucking on one of his ever-present roll-ups, wincing at my lumpen attempts to breathe character and colour into my own work. Occasional­ly, on my best days, I might draw the briefest nod of approval.

I know I’m not alone in this. For scribblers of my generation – you’ll read this in the many personal tributes – Amis, his awesome talent, was both inspiratio­n to and Sistine ceiling on our own efforts. His writings about writing were the only self-help books I’d ever consider picking up. His melding of the demotic and the high style was eradefinin­gly influentia­l.

His journalism was surgical and funny and magnificen­tly bemused by a mad world. There was a thrill of anticipati­on at seeing his name splashed across the top of a Sunday newspaper.

The novels themselves – his mid-career hattrick of Money, London Fields and The Informatio­n aside – were often judged wanting by reviewers. Fair enough. His later fiction was flawed, as boy wonder became elder statesman, and lifestyle and wealth detached him from the earthier experience­s that powered the initial work. In middle age, he took a turn to the serious, when his great talent was for the deliciousl­y observatio­nal, the comedy of manners.

But, I felt critics too often missed the point. There was little to be gained from reviewing him as you’d review his more earthbound peers.

If, by the time of his death, his reputation was no longer what it had once been, this was, I think, partly due to our overfamili­arity with him. We grew complacent about what he could do, even if no one else could do it.

Fashions in literature moved on. The latest being the one-paced, affectless tone of the Sally Rooney crowd. Amis, still rooted in those excavation­s of masculinit­y that dominated literature of the 1970s and 1980s, seemed a man out of place and out of time.

We didn’t even really know where he was any more. He quit London years ago, lived in Uruguay, then New York, and died in the wholly inapposite Florida.

His passing has swung the klieg lights back on his greatness, though. The shock and grief expressed in literary circles is telling. The tributes being paid to his extravagan­t gifts, his sinuous influence, his vast, diverse body of work, are unfeigned and heartfelt.

Amis was both a reader’s writer and a writer’s writer, which is a hard double to pull off. He could be as scintillat­ing on Manchester United or poker as he could be on Vladimir Nabokov or Jane Austen.

Life was better for knowing Amis was out there: in a fuggy study, frowning over Charles Dickens or Saul Bellow, scrawling away in longhand, occasional­ly pausing to cackle at one of his own brilliant formulatio­ns. It was a reassuranc­e to know that something new was coming.

Now, there will be no more glistening sentences, no more perfect encapsulat­ions or snorts of delight. The work is done. From the novelists’ god to the gods’ novelist: lucky them.

For me and Amis... the connection was instant, and unbreakabl­e

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 ?? ?? CELEBRATED: Martin Amis, one of the most respected writers of his generation, has died at 73; the same age as his father, the novelist and critic Kingsley Amis, left.
CELEBRATED: Martin Amis, one of the most respected writers of his generation, has died at 73; the same age as his father, the novelist and critic Kingsley Amis, left.
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