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"Kingsley Amis's drink writing is better than anybody else's,
ever..." Esquire Kingsley Amis was one of the great masters of
comic prose, and no subject was dearer to him than the art and
practice of imbibing. Everyday Drinking brings together the best of
his writing on the subject: Kingsley Amis in Drink, Everyday
Drinking and How's Your Glass? In one handsome package, the book
covers a full shelf of the master's riotous and erudite thoughts on
the drinking arts; along with a series of well-tested recipes
(including a cocktail called the Lucky Jim) are Amis's musings on
The Hangover, The Boozing Man's Diet, The Mean Sod's Guide, and
(presumably as a matter of speculation) How Not to Get Drunk - all
leavened with fun quizzes on the making and drinking of alcohol all
over the world. Mixing practical know-how and hilarious
opinionation, this is a delightful cocktail of wry humour and
distilled knowledge, served by one of our great gimlet wits. With
an introduction by Christopher Hitchens.
Jim Dixon has accidentally fallen into a job at one of Britain's new red brick universities. A moderately successful future in the History Department beckons. As long as Jim can survive a madrigal-singing weekend at Professor Welch's, deliver a lecture on 'Merrie England' and resist Christine, the hopelessly desirable girlfriend of Welch's awful son Bertrand.
An indispensable companion for readers, writers, and even casual
users of the language, the Penguin Modern Classics edition of
Kingsley Amis's The King's English features a new introduction by
Martin Amis. The King's English is Kingsley Amis's authoritative
and witty guide to the use and abuse of the English language. A
scourge of illiteracy and a thorn in the side of pretension, Amis
provides indispensable advice about the linguistic blunders that
lie in wait for us, from danglers and four-letter words to jargon
and even Welsh rarebit. If you have ever wondered whether it's
acceptable to start a sentence with 'and', to boldly split an
infinitive, or to cross your sevens in the French style, Amis has
the answer - or a trenchant opinion. By turns reflective, acerbic
and provocative, The King's English is for anyone who cares about
how the English language is used. Kingsley Amis (1922-1995), born
in London, wrote poetry, criticism, and short stories, but is best
remembered as the novelist whose works offered a comic
deconstruction of post-war Britain. Amis explored his
disillusionment with British society in novels such as Lucky Jim
(1954) and That Uncertain Feeling (1955); his other works include
The Green Man (1970) Stanley and the Women (1984), and The Old
Devils (1986) which won the Booker Prize. If you enjoyed The King's
English you might like Amis's Lucky Jim, also available in Penguin
Modern Classics. 'A terrific book ... learned, robust, aggressive,
extremely funny' Sebastian Faulks
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Lucky Jim (Paperback)
Kingsley Amis
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R266
R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
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'His mouth had been used as a latrine by some small creature of the
night, and then as a mausoleum. During the night, too, he'd somehow
been on a cross-country run and then been expertly beaten up by
secret police. He felt bad.' Jix Dixon has a terrible job at a
second-rate university. His life is full of things he could happily
do without: the tedious and ridiculous Professor Welch, a neurotic
and unstable girlfriend, Margaret, burnt sheets, medieval recorder
music and over-enthusiastic students. If he can just deliver a
lecture on 'Merrie England', a moderately successful career surely
awaits him. But without luck, life is never simple . . .
Elegant, provocative and hugely entertaining, Kingsley Amis's
memoirs are filled with anecdotes, experiences and portraits of
famous friends, family, acquaintances (and a few eminent foes).
From his childhood days to Oxford and army life, his travels abroad
and his years as a successful novelist, Memoirs offers
extraordinary insights into a unique literary life.
In That Uncertain Feeling by Kingsley Amis, competition is stiff
for the position of sub-librarian in Aberdarcy Library. For John
Lewis, the situation is complicated by the attentions of daunting
and desirable village socialite, Elizabeth Gruffyd-Williams, who is
married to a member of the local Council. Pursuing an affair with
her whilst keeping his job prospects alive is John's predicament,
as he finds himself running down Welsh country lanes at midnight in
a wig and dress, resisting the advances of local drunks and
suffering the long speeches of a 'nut-faced' clergyman. At times
tenderly satirical and at times riotously slap-stick, Amis sends up
an array of rural stereotypes in this story about a man who doesn't
know what he wants. Kingsley Amis's (1922-95) works take a humorous
yet highly critical look at British society, especially in the
period following the end of World War II. Born in London, Amis
explored his disillusionment in novels such as That Uncertain
Feeling (1955). His other works include The Green Man (1970),
Stanley and the Women (1984), and The Old Devils (1986), which won
the Booker Prize. Amis also wrote poetry, criticism, and short
stories.
In Kingsley Amis's Difficulties With Girls, Jenny Bunn and Patrick
Standish have settled into London life with their troubled
courtship long behind them. Patrick works in publishing and Jenny
teaches sick children in a hospital. They have reached a certain
level of maturity, or so they think. It is not long before they
realize their respectability will be severely tested by seductive
neighbours with a taste for whisky, the sexually confused Ted
Valentine, and the literary set of Hampstead. In this funny and
provocative study of a young couple growing up, Amis shows us that
the difficulty with marriage is that it's so hard to preserve,
especially when Patrick and Jenny harbour deep yearnings for a
different kind of life. Kingsley Amis's (1922-95) works take a
humorous yet highly critical look at British society, especially in
the period following the end of World War II. Born in London, Amis
explored his disillusionment in novels such as That Uncertain
Feeling (1955). His other works include The Green Man (1970),
Stanley and the Women (1984), and The Old Devils (1986), which won
the Booker Prize. Amis also wrote poetry, criticism, and short
stories.
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Ending Up (Paperback)
Kingsley Amis
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R290
R233
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At Tuppenny-hapenny Cottage in the English countryside, five
elderly people live together in rancorous disharmony. Adela
Bastable bosses the house, as her brother Bernard passes his days
thinking up malicious schemes against the baby-talking Marigold and
secret drinker Shorty, while kindly George lies bedridden upstairs.
The mismatched quintet keep their spirits alive by bickering and
waiting for grandchildren to visit at Christmas. But the festive
season does not herald goodwill to all at Tuppenny-hapenny Cottage.
Disaster and chaos, it seems, are just around the corner ... Told
with Amis's piercing wit and humanity, Ending Up (1974) is a
wickedly funny black comedy of the indignities of old age.
Malcolm, Peter and Charlie and their Soave-sodden wives have one
main ambition left in life: to drink Wales dry. But their routine
is both shaken and stirred when they are joined by professional
Welshman Alun Weaver (CBE) and his wife, Rhiannon.
'One of the very best of our poets' Anthony Powell Kingsley Amis
wrote poems throughout his life, turning his acerbic, bracing
perceptiveness on the same subjects that fill his novels: lust,
lost love, drink, money, God (seen as indifferent or malign), and
old age. Collected Poems, arranged chronologically, shows the full
range of his sparkling verse, by turns scabrous and melancholy,
satirical and playful. 'Scathingly funny ... bawdy and tragic,
unflinching and unapologetic, culpable and morally acute ... Amis's
poems rush headlong into the messiness of life' New Criterion 'A
contender for the title of the most accomplished and least
self-satisfied poet of his generation' Clive James
In Kingsley Amis's Take A Girl Like You, twenty year old Jenny Bunn
is supernally beautiful and stubbornly chaste, which is why Patrick
Standish, an arrogant schoolmaster, wants her so much. This
perceptive coming of age novel about a northern girl who moves
south, wants to fit in and yet wants to preserve her principles,
challenges our assumptions about the battle of the sexes and
classes in Britain. It is a story about 'the squalid business of
the man and the woman' and 'the most wonderful thing that had ever
happened' to Jenny Bunn. Few twentieth century novelists have
explored our preoccupation with sex like Kingsley Amis. The results
are surprising and often hilarious. Kingsley Amis's (1922-95) works
take a humorous yet highly critical look at British society,
especially in the period following the end of World War II. Born in
London, Amis explored his disillusionment in novels such as That
Uncertain Feeling (1955). His other works include The Green Man
(1970), Stanley and the Women (1984), and The Old Devils (1986),
which won the Booker Prize. Amis also wrote poetry, criticism, and
short stories.
Harry Caldecote is the most charming man you'll ever meet, a
convivial academic who devotes his life to others. He is on call
when his alcoholic niece falls into strange hands, when his brother
threatens to emulate Wordsworth, when his son's lesbian lodger is
beaten up by her girlfriend. He endures misplaced seductions,
swindles and aggressive dogs just to keep the peace at the King's
pub in Shepherd's Hill. But when the Adams' Institute of Cultural
and Commercial History in America offers him the opportunity to do
'whatever he wanted to do' in a picturesque lakeside town, he faces
a choice between freedom or responsibility - and whether to take
charge of his own life.
In this surreal comedy of soldiers and spies, Lieutenant James
Churchill and his colleagues find themselves questioning their
purpose. Are they for death or against it? These men of action will
travel between the barracks, the lunatic asylum and the house of an
aristocratic nymphomaniac in search of answers. For while few know
the awful truth about Operation Apollo, the mission they are being
trained for, fewer still understand the motives of the powerful
psychiatrist Dr Best, who thinks he is surrounded by repressed
homosexuals, and none know the identity of the secret agent among
them. When the Anti-Death League is founded they are at last
offered the chance to rebel and perhaps escape ...
A mummy is stolen from a small town museum along with some Roman
coins and a soaking wet man collapses in fourteen year old Peter
Furneaux's living room bleeding from the head. What was a suspected
student prank is followed by murder. At first it is impossible to
see the connection, but the eccentric Colonel Manton does. With
Peter's help the Colonel unravels a mystery that strikes fear into
the heart of a genteel suburban neighbourhood and gives Peter
rather more excitement than he bargained for at the tennis club
social. This meticulously paced thriller shows Amis at his most
subtle and daring.
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Girl, 20 (Paperback)
Kingsley Amis
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R298
R242
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Douglas Yandell, a young-ish music critic, is enlisted by Kitty
Vandervane to keep an eye on her roving husband - the eminent
conductor and would-be radical Sir Roy - as he embarks on yet
another affair. Roy, meanwhile, wants Douglas as an alibi for his
growing involvement with Sylvia, an unsuitably young woman who
loves nothing more than to shock and provoke. Life soon becomes
extremely complicated as Douglas finds himself caught up in a
frantic, farcical tangle of relationships, rivalry and scandal.
Girl, 20 is a merciless send-up of 1970s London's permissive
society from a master of uproarious comedy.
Brimming with gluttony, booze and lust, Roger Micheldene is loose
in America. Supposedly visiting Budweiser University to make deals
for his publishing firm in England, Roger instead sets out to
offend all he meets and to seduce every woman he encounters. But
his American hosts seem made of sterner stuff. Who will be Roger's
undoing? Irving Macher, the young author of an annoyingly brilliant
first novel? Father Colgate, the priest who suggests that Roger's
soul is in torment? Or will it be his married ex-lover Helene? One
thing is certain - Roger is heading for a terrible fall.
Outrageously funny and irreverent, One Fat Englishman (1963) is a
devastating satire on Anglo-American relations.
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Complete Stories (Paperback)
Kingsley Amis; Introduction by Rachel Cusk
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R394
R323
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The short stories of Kingsley Amis - the great master of post-war
comic prose - are dark, playful, moving, surprising and extremely
funny. This definitive collection gathers all Amis's short fiction
in a single volume for the first time and encompasses five decades
of storytelling. In 'The 2003 Claret', written in 1958, a time
machine is invented for the weighty task of sending a man to 2010
to discover what the booze will taste like. In 'Boris and the
Colonel' a Cambridge spy is unearthed in the sleepy English
countryside with the help of a plucky horse, while In 'Mason's
Life' two men meet inside their respective dreams. The collection
spans many genres, offering ingenious alternative histories,
mystery and horror, satirical reflections and a devilishly funny
attacks. Amis's stories reveal the scope of his imagination and the
warmth beneath his acerbic humour, and they all share the
unmistakable style and wit of one of Britain's best loved writers.
Kingsley Amis' (1922-1995) works take a humorous yet highly
critical look at British society, especially of the period
following the end of World War II. Born in London, Amis explored
his disillusionment with British society in novels such as THAT
UNCERTAIN FEELING (1955). His other works include THE GREEN MAN
(1970); STANLEY AND THE WOMEN (1984); and THE OLD DEVILS (1986)
which won the Booker Prize. Amis also wrote poetry, criticism, and
short stories. Rachel Cusk was born in 1967. She has won the
Whitbread First Novel Award and the Somerset Maugham Award, and is
the author of two works of non-fiction and seven novels, including
In The Fold, longlisted for the 2005 Man Booker Prize, and
Arlington Park, shortlisted for the Orange Broadband Prize 2007.
Her non-fiction book, A Life's Work, was published to huge acclaim
in 2001, and her account of a summer spent in Italy with her
family, The Last Supper, was published in 2009. Her most recent
novel, The Bradshaw Variations was published in 2009. In 2003 she
was chosen as one of Granta's Best Young Novelists. She lives in
Brighton.
The quickest way to get rich is to marry someone rich, but how do
you do this if you aren't yet rich? TV chat-show host Ronnie
Appleyard is preoccupied with this question as he pursues wealthy
heiress Simona Quick over two continents in the company of braying
aristocrats, Greek shipping magnates, American dandies and the
dreaded mother-in-law to be. But as he comes closer to his prize
other questions present themselves. Is the androgenous Simona
really worth it? Why doesn't she like sex? Is it possible to drink
all day? With his unerring eye for absurdity and class satire
Kingsley Amis shows us what happens when money meets naked
ambition.
In this hilarious, inspiring and provocative series of essays,
Kingsley Amis introduces every reader to the wonders and value of
science fiction writing. From the extraordinary ideas but sexless
science of Jules Verne to the power of H. G. Wells's terrifying
storytelling; from the brilliance of bad science fiction writing to
the potency of their important ideas; from a portrait of the
average SF reader to Amis's sad prediction that this genre will
never make it in film or television, New Maps of Hell is a warm and
witty exploration of a world many readers may be yet to discover.
Like all good coaching inns, The Green Man is said to boast a
resident ghost: Dr Thomas Underhill, a notorious
seventeenth-century practitioner of black arts and sexual deviancy.
However, the landlord, Maurice Allington, is the sole witness to
the renaissance of the malevolent Underhill. Led by an anxious
desire to vindicate his sanity, Allington strives to uncover the
key to Underhill's satanic powers. All while the skeletons in
Allington's own cupboard rattle to get out.
Robin Davies knows how to look after number one. Raised in a bland
suburb of South London in the 1930s, Robin longs for the freedom to
do what he wants. When he escapes to study in Oxford, he meets
Nancy Bennett, a young woman even less worldly than himself. As
Robin stumbles through his rites of passage to adulthood, involving
rebellion, self-discovery, sex, war, seduction and the threat of
commitment, we come to realise just how far he will go to have his
cake and eat it.
Just when Stanley Duke thinks it safe to sink into middle age, his
son, Steve, goes insane. As if that weren't terrible enough,
Stanley finds himself beset on all sides by women - neurotic,
half-baked, critical or just plain capricious. As one by one they
gnaw away at his composure, Stanley wonders whether insanity is not
something with which all women are intimately acquainted.
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