Obituary | L’enfant terrible

Martin Amis was the lurid chronicler of a whole generation

The novelist, essayist and provocateur died on May 19th, aged 73

LONDON - APRIL 5: Writer Martin Amis at home in London on April 5, 1995. His novels include Yellow Dog, Koba the Dread, The War Against Clich?, Experience, Heavy Water, The Rachel Papers, Dead Babies, Success, Other People: A Mystery Story, Money: A Suicide Note, The Moronic Inferno, Einstein's Monsters, London Fields, Time's Arrow, Visiting Mrs. Nabokov, The Information and Night Train. (Photo by David Levenson/Getty Images)
Image: Getty Images

This article appeared in the Obituary section of the print edition under the headline “L’enfant terrible”

From the May 27th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Obituary

Jimmy Carter in 1976

Jimmy Carter was perhaps the most virtuous of all America’s presidents

The humble peanut farmer who went to the White House died on December 29th, aged 100

Brother Harold Palmer

Brother Harold Palmer lived alone in the wilds by choice

The Northumbrian hermit died on October 4th, aged 93


Shalom Nagar

Shalom Nagar was picked by lottery to kill Adolf Eichmann

The Israeli prison officer turned ritual slaughterer died on November 26th, aged 88


John Kinsel used his own language to fool the Japanese

One of the last Navajo code-talkers died on October 19th, aged 107

Celeste Caeiro’s small gesture named a revolution

The Portuguese restaurant worker and single mother died on November 15th, aged 91

Frank Auerbach aimed only at one memorable image

Britain’s most obsessive figurative painter died on November 11th, aged 93