Blogging...
This year Iâve written a series of blog posts about parenthood, in which I reflect on the relationship between life and art. Do check them out. https://elephant.art/author/henry-hitchings/
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@henryhitchings
Blogging...
This year Iâve written a series of blog posts about parenthood, in which I reflect on the relationship between life and art. Do check them out. https://elephant.art/author/henry-hitchings/

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Hereâs the cover of my new book, which is coming out from Macmillan in June. The publisher describes it as follows:Â âPart portrait of Britainâs greatest man of letters, part guide to life, this is a witty and erudite re-evaluation of Dr Johnsonâs enduring importance and relevance.â Iâll be posting more about it soon.
Itâs not often that a book makes me feel this way. But when it does...
Summer floods in Montreal - thirty years ago today.

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STEIN Something about [All That Man Is] reminds me of David Foster Wallaceâs novels. It asserts a shared realityâeven when the characters seem wrapped up in themselvesâand also, beyond that shared reality, a sort of possible transcendence that keeps twinkling at the edge of everyd...
Further to yesterdayâs post, here is the text of a conversation between David Szalay and Lorin Stein. Â Â
2016 wasnât a busy year on this blog, largely because I was occupied with other things â including a new book. So I was pleasantly surprised when, a few weeks ago, a couple of people mentioned being switched on to Lawrence Osborne by my post about him, which went up in May. One of them went so far as to say that I should write pieces of that kind more often.
I doubt that this will happen much in 2017, but I thought Iâd mention that the best novel Iâve read recently is David Szalayâs All That Man Is. Iâd previously read Szalayâs melancholy Spring and not been very taken with it, but All That Man Is feels thrillingly ambitious.
It comprises nine narratives, the first and last of which are clearly linked. Other than that, the connections are only thematic, albeit sometimes rather didactically underlined. With their nine male protagonists aged between seventeen and seventy-three, the stories share a concern with boredom, failure, transience⌠and of course masculinity and the threats it faces.
Although written before the UKâs referendum on EU membership, All That Man Is also seems like an elegy for the fluidity of movement (and identity) possible in a pre-Brexit Europe. As Dwight Garner commented in the New York Times, âThis book is a demonstration of uncommon power. It is a bummer, and it is beautiful.ââ¨â¨
Inspired â or perhaps provoked â by Szalayâs most recent novel, I turned during the final days of the year to his first, London and the South-East (2008). This struck me as a hybrid of Kafka, J. G. Ballard and Glengarry Glen Ross, with a nod to Hamlet and a heavy helping of The Office. That perhaps risks making it sound more brilliant than it is as well as more derivative, yet it manages to be â and I mean this as praise â rivetingly dismal.Â
â¨The main character is Paul Rainey, an ashen-faced, booze-addled, borderline impotent schlub whoâs somehow also a slick ad salesman, punting space in one of those desolate business magazines you can never quite believe exist. With a fine sense of the absurd, Szalay evokes the crushing drabness of Paulâs life. It says a lot that the chief redeeming feature of his existence is his stepsonâs talent for snooker, which has to be nurtured in environments every bit as grim and crapulent as Paulâs professional world.
Because of his interest in the textures of banality, and because of his recently obvious dissatisfaction with the conventions of the novel, Szalay has been compared to Karl Ove Knausgaard. London and the South-East has some of the Norwegianâs propensity for darkly obsessive self-examination and painful humour. But the most memorable thing about it is its patient scrutiny of the realities and indignities of the modern workplace. â¨
A torpedo boat being tested near Detroit, 76 years ago today. This experimental craft was designed by T. F. Thompson and A. W. Reed, who believed it could reach a speed of 300 mph.
The very over-sensitivity which equips you to be a writer also makes being a writer agony
David Hare, The Blue Touch Paper

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For pre-pubertal Westerners, sweets fill the vacuum later to be occupied by sex. It is unnerving to watch an otherwise decent child being temporarily demoralised (in the literal sense of being morally corrupted) by a desire for sweets as an otherwise decent adult may be by sexual need. In both cases, the overwhelming lust for immediate sensual gratification destroys habitual scruples, yet is itself tainted by a guilty awareness that fulfilment may collapse into satiety, shame and physical discomfort. The whole animal being is involved. A three-year-old with a chocolate-smeared face can wear the hangdog look of a man whose wife surprises him in adultery. For children, sweets are big magic. Itâs observable that the considerable number of adults who donât much take to sex tend to be among those who retain a considerable appetite for confectionery.
from Michael Irwinâs assessment of Georgeâs Marvellous Medicine in the London Review of Books, 1 October 1981
Fear will be a terrible fox at my vitals under my tunic of behaviour
Elizabeth Smart, By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept
I havenât posted in a couple of months, simply because Iâve been preoccupied with other things. I hope to be more active here in the final third of the year.
But hereâs some news, or a teaser at least, in the form of the cover image for a book I have edited that is out soon (early October). The design is by the excellent Jamie Keenan; you can check out his work at http://www.keenandesign.com/Â
Browse is a collection of new essays about bookshops. Thereâs one by me, and there are contributions from Juan Gabriel VĂĄsquez, Yiyun Li, Elif Shafak, Iain Sinclair, Pankaj Mishra, Ali Smith, Andrey Kurkov, Alaa Al Aswany, Dorthe Nors, Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor, Michael Dirda, SaĹĄa StaniĹĄiÄ, Ian Sansom, Stefano Benni and Daniel Kehlmann.
Should be available from all good, erm, bookshops...
In writing, as in life, faults are endured without disgust when they are associated with transcendent merit, and may be sometimes recommended to weak judgments by the lustre which they obtain from their union with excellence; but it is the business of those who presume to superintend the taste or morals of mankind to separate delusive combinations, and distinguish that which may be praised from that which can only be excused.
Samuel Johnson, Rambler 158 (1751)

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It is Kant who made really bad writing philosophically acceptable
Derek Parfit, On What Matters
The Tonnara at Scopello in north-west Sicily. âWhen I first came to Scopello,â wrote Gavin Maxwell in The Ten Pains of Death, âI thought only that it was the most beautiful place I had ever seen.âÂ