MARTIN AMIS is the author of 15 novels—among them Zone of Interest, London Fields, Time’s Arrow, The Information, and Night Train—along with the memoir Experience, the novelized self-portrait Inside Story, two collections of stories, and seven nonfiction books. He died in 2023.
“Amis is a force unto himself. . . . There is, quite simply, no one
else like him.” —The Washington Post
“One of Amis’s funniest novels.” —The New Yorker
“Amis’s language is electric, his wit as sharp and precise than it
has been in a decade.” —USA Today
“Full of heart and warmth . . . an unexpected reward for readers.”
—People
“At heart an old-fashioned novel. . . . Amis is, like Dickens, an
insistently moral writer, satire being an edifying genre with a
noble cause: the improvement of society.” —The New York Times Book
Review
“Breathtaking. . . . A great big confidence trick of a novel—an
attack that turns into an embrace—a book that looks at us, laughs
at us, looks at us harder, closer, and laughs at us harder and
still more savagely. It is every inch the novel that we all
deserve. So let’s give thanks that Martin Amis was bad enough and
brave enough to write it.” —The Guardian (London)
“Shockingly, savagely funny. . . . Martin Amis represents the best
of contemporary British literature—serious, hilarious, unsettling
and provocative.” —Huffington Post
“Lionel Asbo bears a strong resemblance to the trio of novels . . .
that made Amis’ reputation. . . . But Lionel Asbo may be even
better than these ambitious works of fiction, more disciplined,
funnier and more inventive. . . . To say that it is a return to
form is an understatement—it might be his finest work.” —The Denver
Post
“Full of Amis’ trademark virtuoso prose and wit. . . . Technically
brilliant, dazzling in style, manic in energy and driven by a
narrative momentum impossible to resist.” —The Toronto Star
“Little in fiction is more entertaining than Martin Amis at his
pithy best. . . . ‘Lionel Asbo: State of England’ posits plenty of
pith and cutting cultural criticism. It is wild. It is whacked. . .
. [It] swings between wildly funny and harshly real.” —The Plain
Dealer
“Amis’ portrait of someone who feeds Tabasco-splashed meat to his
pit bulls in order to enrage them and toughen them up is
surprisingly tender. . . . Fond, too, is Amis’ approach to Asbo’s
mixed-race nephew, who serves as the vehicle for the moral
conclusion of what in form is in fact not satire but a fairytale .
. . Amis’ plea . . . would seem to be that nobody is beyond
redemption.” —The Daily Beast
“An Amis sentence is mordant and coruscating, unpredictable and
unruly, its own singular music. No surprise, these creations gather
into paragraphs of propulsive insights, mini-essays in satiric spin
and compression. There may be no better paragraph writer in the
language, either. . . . The novel mingles in genuine characters
with the usual comedic grotesques, and is tender, almost earnest,
in its emotions.” —The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
“Crackles with brilliant prose and scathing satire. . . . He riffs
like a jazz master, in and out of vernacular, with brief gusts of
description, all driven by a tight bass line of suspense.”
—Publishers Weekly
“In his 13th novel—one of his most compulsively readable—wily,
dead-on satirist and consummate artist Martin Amis is grandly
acerbic, funny and unnerving. . . . With crisp insights, rollicking
storytelling and acrobatic wit, Amis has created a peppery,
topsy-turvy Pygmalion fable and hilarious dismantlement of our
cherished rags-to-riches fantasy.” —Kansas City Star
“This deliciously shivery, sly, and taunting page-turner provokes a
fresh assessment of the poverty of place, mind, and spirit and the
wondrous blossoming of against-all-odds goodness.” —Booklist
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