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Evelyn Waugh, the Art of Fiction No. 30 (1963) (theparisreview.org)
35 points by samclemens on Feb 28, 2016 | hide | past | favorite | 7 comments



This was a great interview, and it was very interesting to read that Waugh admits to being influenced by Hemingway's "The Sun Also Rises": I remember reading that book and "Vile Bodies" at much the same time and thinking to myself how similar they were (though Brideshead, really, is very different).

Whenever I have the misfortune to visit a shopping centre, I always make an effort to quote Waugh: "All that succession and repetition of massed humanity... Those vile bodies..."


This is wonderful.

It's sad that both the writer in Waugh's mould, and the interview in this style, seem like relics of a bygone era.


Could you please elaborate on what you mean when you say there are no more writers in Waugh's mold? I have read his major works, and enjoyed them tremendously, but think that the reason I haven't found recent works of similar literary merit may be a lack of perspective.


I've only read a few of Waugh's novels, but love A Handful of Dust.

My comment was about the interview though. I think you'd be hard pressed to find a writer today who, without apparent pretense, begins an interview by putting on a robe, complaining authoritatively about the lack of good views in London hotels, retiring to the bedroom while bullying the interviewer into smoking a cigar with aristocratic aplomb, and tearing down his own work and that of his contemporaries with casual precision.


That was really excellent. To the point. A good summary:

"I regard writing not as investigation of character, but as an exercise in the use of language, and with this I am obsessed. I have no technical psychological interest."

The Men at Arms trilogy was just excellent.


How many thought Evelyn Waugh was a women?





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