. . . Yellow Dog, at least in
the opinion of The Guardian, which seems never to have heard of JK
Rowling, is quite simply “the most talked about novel of the year
.”.
. .. . . his
world is endemically, preternaturally violent. “Male violence did it,”
we are told at the beginning of Yellow Dog. The victim of this
violence is Xan Meo who, up until the point he is thwacked on the
head, is living the kind of life that exists only in glossy mags. He
has a gorgeous American wife called Russia, two young daughters, a
house in central London with a high-ceilinged hallway, and is
“quietly” famous, a consequence of his success as an actor and the
publication of his first collection of short stories, Lucozade.
All seems to be going swimmingly for Xan as he heads for Camden
Town where he will arrive at a bar called Hollywood, order two
cocktails, called Dickheads, and sip them slowly while musing on his
disastrous first marriage and the effect of the divorce on his two
sons. Yellow Dog’s overture is archetypal, inimitable, vintage Amis,
the prose fizzing with untappable energy, the wit keen and
devastating. Overhead, as Xan strolls, are “distant aeroplanes like
incandescent spermatozoa”. He spies a drunk with “a face like a
baboon’s arse”. The wind is a “ragged and bestial temperance ... a
rodeo of a wind”. A young mother wears her clothes so tight they are
“woman-crammed”.
Whatever else one may accuse Amis of, laziness is not on the charge
sheet. What we are witnessing in these opening pages, and what we will
see a lot more of in the 300 and more pages to come, is “the
obscenification of everyday life”, the brutalisation of society and
culture. It begins when Xan is battered and gradually reverts to his
former coarser, cruder, lewder self, an animal of a man who sinks so
low he even considers incest.
He is not alone. At every level of society there are plenty
examples of degeneracy, from the sewer journalism of the Morning Lark,
a so-called newspaper with w*****s rather than readers that makes the
Daily Star look like the People’s Friend, to the Royal Household,
where the incumbent king, Henry IX, makes hay with a courtesan in
Paris while his wife lies like a vegetable in hospital and stills of
his naked 15-year-old daughter circulate.
Xan’s descent gives Yellow Dog its momentum. As a satire, however,
its humour is too often reliant on scatology or the kind of sexist
comedy that Viz readers think is funny. Amis’s intention is to shock,
which he does with conviction, but as the novel goes on and on one’s
senses are blunted and the harder it gets to see the point in the
incessant pornography, the orgy of lust, the absence of redemption.
We are bombarded with characters with cartoonish names (Clint
Smoker, the Morning Lark’s ace writer; Brendan Urquhart-Gordon, aka
Bugger, the King’s right-hand man etc). The atmosphere is Orwellian,
apocalyptic, turbulent, underlined by CigAir101, carrying 399
passengers and crew, plus the corpse of one Royce Traynor rolling
about in the hold, from Heathrow to Houston, Texas. Meanwhile, a comet
is hurtling earthwards. No-one, it seems, can escape.
How all this knits together is not the least problem confronting
readers of Yellow Dog. In places it is exhilarating, but these are too
few to compensate for the considerable passages of tedium when Amis is
operating on autopilot, rolling out metaphors as if from a conveyor
belt. Xan, the main man, a contemporary Everyman, is a man at sea,
morally adrift, unsure whether he is the skipper or a deckhand. His
excuse, his alibi, is the bash on the head which rendered him
insensible. “Male violence did it.” That’s his defence. Ordinary men,
who have taken for granted their role in life for millennia, have no
such get out.
For them, the present is unsettling and the future uncertain. Women
hold the balance of power at work, home, in bed. As ever with Amis,
sex holds the key to everything. If only it were that simple.
07 September 2003