Predicting Classics
(Site manager's note: Waterstone's Books U.K. recently sponsored a "Test of
Time" survey, asking prominent writers to predict which 20th century novels will be
judged "classics" in the 21st. Three novels by Martin Amis--Money,
London Fields, and Time's Arrow--were nominated. Excerpts from the London
Times article on the survey follow).
January 18, 1999, Monday
SECTION: Home news
Choice of best modern novels starts title fight
By Dalya Alberge, arts correspondent
PREDICTIONS on what fiction from this century will survive into the
new millennium as classic literature have deeply divided writers, publishers and critics.
J.G. Ballard, the novelist, chooses Brave New World, Roy
Hattersley, former deputy leader of the Labour Party, opts for Sons and Lovers
and Chris Woodhead, the Chief Inspector of Schools, nominates The Jungle Book.
They are among 47 people who took part in the survey "Test of
Time," organised by Waterstone's, the bookshop chain. Most of them, feeling that
classics from previous centuries are likely to remain classics, prefer to forecast the
future for more recent novels.Only Julie Burchill chose one of her own works, Ambition,
as the "best novel about the Eighties ever written."
She dismissed Orwell's Animal Farm as "simplistic tosh" and
Lawrence's Sons and Lovers as "perspiring pervert gets it wrong again".
Writers who appear in a number of lists include Virginia Woolf, Salman Rushdie and
Joyce for Ulysses. The literary future of those from the earlier half of the century,
including F. Scott Fitzgerald and D.H. Lawrence, seems assured in the 21st century.
But postwar writers divide opinions or cause surprise: Martin Amis receives more
mentions - with London Fields, Money and Time's Arrow - than his father
Kingsley for Lucky Jim. Ballard, whose novels include Empire of the Sun and
Crash, said: "It's surprisingly difficult to predict which contemporary novels,
if any, will be the classics of the future."
He excludes the American writers Thomas Pynchon, Philip Roth and Norman Mailer as
"overblown and self-immersed" and Britain's Angus Wilson and Kingsley Amis as
"deeply parochial": "All these writers are more famous than their books, a
sure sign of the second-rate."
Richard Beswick, editorial director of Abacus, said: "One person's essential
classic is inevitably another's unreadable instrument of torture."

