Boozing with Kingsley Amis

From Bookforum magazine, this is the best article I’ve read in a long time - Alexander Waugh (guess which literary family he comes from) writes on Kingsley Amis and his addiction to the sauce.

Photographs of the novelist Kingsley Amis, taken between his fiftieth birthday in April 1972 and his death in October 1995, sometimes show a resplendent sheen on his forehead, nose, and cheeks. This is what some people call “sweat alcohol,” a common problem among heavy drinkers of shorts and beer. On both of the occasions on which I had the pleasure to meet this funny and distinguished man, he drank whisky throughout lunch and by the afternoon was wearing that slightly bewildered, slightly aggressive, slightly penitent expression known as the “Scotch gaze,” a look familiar to all who have walked the streets of Glasgow or Aberdeen at closing time on a Friday night.

How’s Your Glass?, Everyday Drinking and On Drink are Amis’ three books about drinking.

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