"Every page of London Fields has a sense of an author in absolute command." Rob Doyle

"Every page of London Fields has a sense of an author in absolute command." Rob Doyle

In the basement room of an East London flat one rainy January morning, Jack sat down with the Irish writer Rob Doyle to discuss the publication of his third novel, Cameo, and delve into his long and complex love for the work of Martin Amis.


Rob chose to talk about London Fields, the novel we first encounter on this series through the Financial Times columnist, Janan Ganesh. But whereas Ganesh grew up in Croydon in the late Eighties, with the London Amis depicts in the novel practically on his doorstep, Doyle had never been to England's capital when the cover of London Fields first caught his eye, aged 23, from the shelves of a book exchange at a backpacker's hostel in South East Asia.


On a long bus journey in this far-flung part of the world, Doyle recounts coming to terms with the alchemic mastery of Amis's prose in this 1989 masterpiece. London Fields, he says, blended seamlessly the very highest ideas with the very lowest, all to great comic effect. Writing about London, Amis was engaged in an act of philosophy, dredged up from the deepest pits of urban and human decay.


Rob and Jack go on to discuss that force of nature that is of course Keith Talent. Talent is for Doyle, as he is for Ganesh, not just one of Amis's greatest characters, but one of the greatest characters ever to cast a shadow on the history of English literature. Of all Amis's beleaguered and benighted male creations, Talent is also arguably the happiest, since apart from anything else, he would be the least bothered by Amis's contempt for him.


Later on, Rob and Jack talk about the world Amis so often condemns his male characters to live in. Whether we look to John Self (a man consumed by his own oniomania), the bleak rivalry that sets Keith Talent and Guy Clinch on their fateful course with Nicola Six, or indeed that which Richard Tull and Gwyn Barry must see through a novel later in The Information, Amis's men are rarely sanguine creatures.


Male conflict and humiliation were two of Amis's greatest subjects, but while Doyle still regards Amis as one of the best writers ever to interrogate them in their art, he is less convinced by Amis's opposition outlook on male relationships now, in his forties, than he was as a younger man.


Happy New Year to you, dear listener. 2026 has begun.



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Avsnitt(24)

"When you don't win The Booker, you know it's alright, because Amis didn't either." Kevin Power

"When you don't win The Booker, you know it's alright, because Amis didn't either." Kevin Power

Many a male Amis reader owes his smoking habit to the author.The novelist Kevin Power is one who thought he'd quit for good, until he spotted Amis and Isabel Fonseca walking on the grounds of Ireland'...

6 Maj 55min

"I wish Amis's Substack was landing in my inbox today." George Monaghan and Nicholas Harris

"I wish Amis's Substack was landing in my inbox today." George Monaghan and Nicholas Harris

For this episode of My Martin Amis, we're plugging into the London recording studio of the New Statesman magazine.From the intro: "Founded by economists and social reformers Sidney and Beatrice Webb a...

14 Mars 36min

"Amis's talent was to put words to things in ways both unobvious and inevitable." David Szalay

"Amis's talent was to put words to things in ways both unobvious and inevitable." David Szalay

David Szalay won the Booker Prize for his sixth novel Flesh in 2025. In this tense, spare, frictionless work of fiction, he drip feeds us the story of the laconic male protagonist Istvan, who spends h...

12 Feb 44min

"I went to pick him up at Manchester Piccadilly Station and...he was doing Pilates." John McAuliffe and Ian McGuire

"I went to pick him up at Manchester Piccadilly Station and...he was doing Pilates." John McAuliffe and Ian McGuire

This episode takes Jack Aldane to Manchester, where he meets two men who knew Martin Amis in a rather unique setting. Ian McGuire and John McAuliffe, both esteemed authors, are the co-founders of The ...

3 Sep 202550min

"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

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.G...

5 Aug 202545min

"I hope writers today can rediscover the verve and energy of Martin Amis." Ross Barkan

"I hope writers today can rediscover the verve and energy of Martin Amis." Ross Barkan

Ross Barkan is a 35 year-old American journalist and novelist from Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. His third novel, Glass Century, was published on 6 May 2025.On a semi-vacation to London this summer, Ross and J...

18 Juli 202547min

"The Zone of Interest records the greatest phraselet in the English language." Vincenzo Barney

"The Zone of Interest records the greatest phraselet in the English language." Vincenzo Barney

Vincenzo Barney travelled all the way from Massachusetts to join a panel of eight speakers at the My Martin Amis LIVE show in March this year. If you haven't listened to it already, do go back and hit...

6 Maj 202539min

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