DiscoverMy Martin Amis"Amis wrote with precision of judgement, of observation, and with great linguistic ingenuity." Geoff Dyer
"Amis wrote with precision of judgement, of observation, and with great linguistic ingenuity." Geoff Dyer

"Amis wrote with precision of judgement, of observation, and with great linguistic ingenuity." Geoff Dyer

Update: 2025-08-05
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In this episode, Jack sits down with the award-winning author and novelist Geoff Dyer at his home to discuss the Good Book of Mart (as distinct from the Big Book of Mart), AKA The War Against Cliché.


Geoff recalls his first encounter with Amis’s fiction, which he read consecutively as a young man, starting with The Rachel Papers in the late 70s and throughout the early 80s, until he was completely blown away by Money in 1984.


Geoff says The War Against Cliché is an inexhaustible source of inspiration for him as a writer, not least because the essays contained within make the reader acutely aware of how much fun Amis had with his craft. Amis makes writing seem like the best job in the world, which explains why so many journalists treat The War Against Cliché as a talisman.


As well as the essays that stand out most within this collection, Jack and Geoff imagine what chance Geoff would have stood against Amis on the tennis court, why Geoff was right bring a bag of Amis’s books to a dinner party for signing, what the Amisian ‘aura’ was really all about, and how the publication of Geoff’s new memoir, Homework, gives him pause to reflect on Amis’s achievements with both Experience and Inside Story.


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"Amis wrote with precision of judgement, of observation, and with great linguistic ingenuity." Geoff Dyer

"Amis wrote with precision of judgement, of observation, and with great linguistic ingenuity." Geoff Dyer