GR8
Expectations
[an excerpt from Ludovic Hunter-Tilney's
review of Yellow Dog in the Financial Times. September
6, 2003 , p. 26)]
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. . .
Superficially, it's a return to the fictional milieu of Money (1984) and
London Fields (1989). Actually, it's a return to fiction itself, since
Amis's most recent books have been non-fiction: a superb memoir,
Experience, and a much less expert one about Stalin, Koba the Dread. His
last full-length novel, The Information, was published in 1995.
. . .
As the son of a famous novelist, Amis seems to have had an awareness of
where he'd like to be in the pecking order (the top, or thereabouts)
bred into him. But now that his preoccupation with writing has become
explicitly autobiographical, and his fiction- writing sporadic, it's not
clear what type of a writer he is, nor which hoops his talent is taking
him through. Yellow Dog adds to the puzzle.
. . .
When the Granta list of Best of Young British novelists was announced in
1983, Amis was reckoned leader of an unusually strong crop of writers.
. . .
Twenty years later, a comparison with some of his Granta peers is
instructive. Like his friend Salman Rushdie, Amis has come to epitomise
the writer as celebrity. Like his ex-friend Julian Barnes (their
falling-out helped inspire The Information), he has been increasingly
drawn to journalism and other non-fiction. And, unlike Ian McEwan, Pat
Barker or Kazuo Ishiguro, he can no longer be considered as first and
foremost a novelist. That is why Yellow Dog is awaited so eagerly, and
with such sharpened knives. If this were a western, now is the scene
when rival novelists and critics look up from their tables, pens poised
mid-sentence, as a grizzled Amis enters the saloon with a dangerous
glint in his eye and a raging thirst.
. . .
The novel begins with 47-year-old writer and actor Xan Meo bidding
farewell to his American wife Russia and their little daughters as he
heads out for a drink at a north London bar. His wife prolongs the
goodbye, as women do: "Men shouldn't mind this. Being kept waiting is a
moderate reparation for their five million years in power...". At the
bar, he orders a cocktail called a Dickhead and retires to the garden,
where he gets coshed on the head by mysterious assailants: "Xan Meo went
to hospital. Male violence did it."
His cranial blow causes enfeeblement and reversion to a more primitive
masculinity. He lapses into cockney villain-speak, lusts after every
woman he sees and makes macho pronouncements about food ("Seafood is
bullshit. I want meat"). His baby daughter cries when he goes near her;
his four-year-old treats him like "a moderately intriguing family
friend". Russia mourns the considerate husband he used to be and resists
his constant, fumbling attempts at sex.
There are subplots involving the British king, Henry IX, whose teenage
daughter seems to have been caught up in a porn film, and a tabloid hack
called Clint Smoker who writes the psychotically laddish "Yellow Dog"
column in the Morning Lark ("So some so-called 15-year-old is crying
'rape' after a bit of fun in a ditch with an older lad"). Smoker, a
sexual inadequate with small genitalia, gets involved in an e-mail
romance with someone signing herself as "k8", ie. Kate, whose text-spelt
messages to him become 2ruly gr8ing 2 read. Interspersed through the
novel, unconnected to its principal action, are scenes from a passenger
jet on which a widow is repatriating the coffin holding her dead
husband; like death-in- life or some malign masculine entropy, the
corpse causes havoc as its coffin gets buffeted around the hold.
Amis has often had a problem structuring his fiction: books such as
London Fields are overlong and fall apart at the end. Yellow Dog isn't
too long, but its plot randomly lurches and heaves like a person
suffering from seasickness. This would matter less if the satire weren't
so feeble. Although the names of Henry Fielding and Jonathan Swift are
bandied about hopefully in the text, the comedy generated at the expense
of the monarchy and tabloid press feels forced and colourless. Clint
Smoker ranks very low down Amis's gallery of fictional grotesques, while
the flat scenes involving King Hal and his private secretary, Bugger,
seem half-hearted.
Even Amis's banker, his extraordinary use of language, occasionally
deserts him. The "fundamentally egregious cataract of tactical nuclear
strike" (a thunderclap), "the way her flesh pushed out at him like the
contours of a coin" (a description of a face): these are moments of
overwriting, though in fairness they stand out because so much else is
vividly crafted. Xan walking in a gale, for instance: "Xan was too old
for fashion, for cuts and styles; but his trousers, now, were
alternately flared and drainpiped by the wind."
It's a very flawed book, but there are some notable points of interest:
signs that Amis is a good enough writer to fascinate even when he's
off-form. Themes and characters from earlier works resurface: a heavy
called Big Mal first turned up in a short story in the collection Heavy
Water, while an episode when Xan visits the Californian porn industry is
based on a magazine article Amis wrote. But the most interesting
pre-echo is in Experience, when he describes his yearning for a
daughter: "...I wanted to raise a girl. I was desperate to see how the
other half lived." When Fernanda, his first daughter by his second wife,
was born her heart briefly stopped beating, "and from then on all
thoughts were primitive and choric".
The word "choric" recurs in Yellow Dog, initially on the opening page
when it describes the injured Xan's howls of pain. Although the book is
mainly about maleness, as so much of Amis's writing is, it's also about
daughters: a new departure. The focus, disturbingly, is on their
sexuality. The king is graphically awakened to it by a film still of his
15-year-old daughter lying naked in a bath. More disturbing yet, Xan
entertains incestuous thoughts about his girls, as his wish to protect
them from danger morphs into an urge to possess them: "I can't protect
them. They're mine, and I can't protect them. So why not rend them? Why
not rape them?"
These are dark thoughts indeed, and one admires (though doesn't relish)
Amis's bravery in delving into them. The suggestion is that it requires
an effort of will and act of love to be a good father and husband. When
Russia asks the post-injury, Mr Hyde-like Xan to remember himself and
stop being so libidinous and aggressive, the problem is that that's
exactly what he is doing: remembering himself. Maleness unvarnished,
according to Amis, is an aberrant condition ruled by primitive drives
towards sex and violence. At its most gripping, Yellow Dog reads like a
weird dream or rites of passage myth, in which Xan has to resist a
craving to murder father figures, be faithless to his wife and sleep
with his children.
In the past Amis has been criticised for his portrayal of women, who in
earlier novels are usually cartoonish sex objects. Since his look at
marriage in The Information, he has tried to incorporate such criticisms
into his writing. His 1998 novella Night Train was narrated by a
gruff-voiced woman called Mike, who is a sort of symbolic halfway house
between male and female ("I am a police" is her studiedly genderless
opening line). In Experience, he reflects with horror on Fred West, the
mass murderer who killed Amis's cousin Lucy Partington. In Yellow Dog,
Clint Smoker is a (not very good) parody of misogynist Amisian
anti-heroes such as the monstrous John Self, narrator of Money.
Having once written with amoral seductiveness about badly behaved men,
Amis now inquires into the source of men's bad behaviour: male human
nature and the extent to which it determines their actions. The
preoccupation ties in with his belief in a book's inherent, objective
worth, "the thing behind" literary activity. It's a question of trying
to uncover essential truths in a secular universe, the bigger thing
behind everyday life, and it marks an important development in the ideas
behind Amis's writing. The next step is for him to parlay them into a
good novel - unlike Yellow Dog.
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