“Fiction is life with the dull bits left out.” – Clive James
An Australian author, critic,
broadcaster, poet and humorist who lived in Great Britain most of his adult
life, James was born on this date in 1939 and broke into the writing world in
the 1970s as a television critic for The
Observer magazine. He gained a wide
reading audience with his autobiographical series Unreliable Memoirs and his acclaimed book of biographical essays Cultural Amnesia - wonderful biographical sketches of 20th century figures.
James, who died in 2019, also published four novels and several
books of poetry, including The Book of My Enemy, a volume that
took its title from his earlier humorous poem "The Book of My Enemy Has
Been Remaindered” (the term used in bookselling to put your books in the bargain basement bin).
Humor, he said, is an essential part
of every writer’s arsenal. “Common sense
and a sense of humor are the same thing, moving at different speeds. A sense of humor is just common sense,
dancing.”
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