"Fear and
Loathing"
[an excerpt from Jane Shilling's review of Yellow Dog,
31 August 2003, p. 11]
. . .
. . . However long ago it is since you read your last
Martin Amis, the sensation of picking up Yellow Dog is like that of
settling back into the driving seat of the first car you ever owned: everything
is exactly where you expect it to be: fear - check. Loathing - check. People
without moral spirit-levels doing unspeakable things to and with each other -
check.
Yellow Dog weaves together three strands of plot. One concerns a
novelist, Xan Meo, who is (like his creator) divorced and remarried, with two
small daughters from the second marriage, and bigger boys from the first. His
life seems perfectly lovely, until it is undone on the instant by a brisk
duffing-up in a Camden Town bar, name of Hollywood.
Then there is the turbulent narrative of flight CigAir101 from London, Heathrow
to Houston, Texas, carrying 399 passenger and crew, plus a corpse called Royce
Traynor, who gets up to all sorts of destructive mischief in the hold.
Last, there is Amis's take on the royals and the press. There is a king, Henry
IX, a fusion of the more vapid bits of the Prince of Wales and Edward VIII. He
has an assistant amusingly nicknamed Bugger, a wife in a coma and a teenage
daughter, Victoria, who seems to have been filmed without her clothes on. This
(or rather, the unclothed female body in all its infinite variety) is the
preoccupation of a newspaper called the Morning Lark, for which a
journalist called Clint Smoker works.
Smoker has a sharp, repulsive mind, a tiny male organ and a virtual relationship
with an improbably acquiescent female. Amis's intention in this area is
perceptibly satirical. He is an adept parodist of the prose styles of both the
royals and the gutter press. In fact he is highly satirical all round, except
when it comes to small children. In this area, not even Dickens can match the
sugary reservoirs of Amis's sentimentality.
At least one of Amis's fellow novelists, impertinently ignoring the press
embargo, has called the novel bad in vivid terms. Well, it isn't. Amis is too
clever and too adept with language for that. Whatever the literary equivalent of
junk-food appeal may be - fatty, salty, addictive - he is the master of it.
Yellow Dog is readable, amusing and clever, which gives it a head start
on the majority of modern novels. On the other hand, it doesn't give the
feeling, which its publisher would clearly like to claim, of a great modern
novelist at the full stretch of his powers. There is a sense about Yellow Dog of
Amis not coming up with something: of something held back, which might be
idleness, or fear, or even incapacity. If he were a racehorse, you'd be afraid
he was getting sour.
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Understanding Martin Amis, 2nd edition (2004).
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