Posted on 06/28/2011 12:51:29 PM PDT by Borges
30. Gustave Flaubert on George Sand
A great cow full of ink.
29. Robert Louis Stevenson on Walt Whitman
like a large shaggy dog just unchained scouring the beaches of the world and baying at the moon.
28. Friedrich Nietzsche on Dante Alighieri
A hyena that wrote poetry on tombs.
27. Harold Bloom on J.K. Rowling (2000)
How to read Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone? Why, very quickly, to begin with, and perhaps also to make an end. Why read it? Presumably, if you cannot be persuaded to read anything better, Rowling will have to do.
26. Vladimir Nabokov on Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevkys lack of taste, his monotonous dealings with persons suffering with pre-Freudian complexes, the way he has of wallowing in the tragic misadventures of human dignity all this is difficult to admire.
25. Gertrude Stein on Ezra Pound
A village explainer. Excellent if you were a village, but if you were not, not.
24. Virginia Woolf on Aldous Huxley
All raw, uncooked, protesting.
23. H. G. Wells on George Bernard Shaw
An idiot child screaming in a hospital.
22. Joseph Conrad on D.H. Lawrence
Filth. Nothing but obscenities.
21. Lord Byron on John Keats (1820)
Here are Johnny Keats piss-a-bed poetry, and three novels by God knows whom No more Keats, I entreat: flay him alive; if some of you dont I must skin him myself: there is no bearing the drivelling idiotism of the Mankin.
20. Vladimir Nabokov on Joseph Conrad
I cannot abide Conrads souvenir shop style and bottled ships and shell necklaces of romanticist cliches.
19. Dylan Thomas on Rudyard Kipling
Mr Kipling stands for everything in this cankered world which I would wish were otherwise.
18. Ralph Waldo Emerson on Jane Austen
Miss Austens novels . . . seem to me vulgar in tone, sterile in artistic invention, imprisoned in the wretched conventions of English society, without genius, wit, or knowledge of the world. Never was life so pinched and narrow. The one problem in the mind of the writer . . . is marriageableness.
17. Martin Amis on Miguel Cervantes
Reading Don Quixote can be compared to an indefinite visit from your most impossible senior relative, with all his pranks, dirty habits, unstoppable reminiscences, and terrible cronies. When the experience is over, and the old boy checks out at last (on page 846 the prose wedged tight, with no breaks for dialogue), you will shed tears all right; not tears of relief or regret but tears of pride. You made it, despite all that Don Quixote could do.
16. Charles Baudelaire on Voltaire (1864)
I grow bored in France and the main reason is that everybody here resembles Voltaire the king of nincompoops, the prince of the superficial, the anti-artist, the spokesman of janitresses, the Father Gigone of the editors of Siecle.
15. William Faulkner on Ernest Hemingway
He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary.
14. Ernest Hemingway on William Faulkner
Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words?
13. Gore Vidal on Truman Capote
Hes a full-fledged housewife from Kansas with all the prejudices.
12. Oscar Wilde on Alexander Pope
There are two ways of disliking poetry; one way is to dislike it, the other is to read Pope.
11. Vladimir Nabokov on Ernest Hemingway (1972)
As to Hemingway, I read him for the first time in the early forties, something about bells, balls and bulls, and loathed it.
10. Henry James on Edgar Allan Poe (1876)
An enthusiasm for Poe is the mark of a decidedly primitive stage of reflection.
9. Truman Capote on Jack Kerouac
Thats not writing, thats typing.
8. Elizabeth Bishop on J.D. Salinger
I HATED [Catcher in the Rye]. It took me days to go through it, gingerly, a page at a time, and blushing with embarrassment for him every ridiculous sentence of the way. How can they let him do it?
7. D.H. Lawrence on Herman Melville (1923)
Nobody can be more clownish, more clumsy and sententiously in bad taste, than Herman Melville, even in a great book like Moby Dick .One wearies of the grand serieux. Theres something false about it. And thats Melville. Oh dear, when the solemn ass brays! brays! brays!
6. W. H. Auden on Robert Browning
I dont think Robert Browning was very good in bed. His wife probably didnt care for him very much. He snored and had fantasies about twelve-year-old girls.
5. Evelyn Waugh on Marcel Proust (1948)
I am reading Proust for the first time. Very poor stuff. I think he was mentally defective.
4. Mark Twain on Jane Austen (1898)
I havent any right to criticize books, and I dont do it except when I hate them. I often want to criticize Jane Austen, but her books madden me so that I cant conceal my frenzy from the reader; and therefore I have to stop every time I begin. Every time I read Pride and Prejudice, I want to dig her up and hit her over the skull with her own shin-bone.
3. Virginia Woolf on James Joyce
[Ulysses is] the work of a queasy undergraduate scratching his pimples.
2. William Faulkner on Mark Twain (1922)
A hack writer who would not have been considered fourth rate in Europe, who tricked out a few of the old proven sure fire literary skeletons with sufficient local color to intrigue the superficial and the lazy.
1. D.H. Lawrence on James Joyce (1928)
My God, what a clumsy olla putrida James Joyce is! Nothing but old fags and cabbage stumps of quotations from the Bible and the rest stewed in the juice of deliberate, journalistic dirty-mindedness.
Some fun.
Poets are an angry race.
Thanks for the chuckles! #4 was my favorite!
Awesome. Even the ones I don’t agree with I like.
Best line Truman Capote ever wrote.
bfl
A good description of most of them. The envy just drips from these quotes. Even the ones I agree with. :)
I guess this is why Disraeli said, “Whenever I want to read a good novel, I write one”.
Capote`s insult of Kerouac is the only thing of his I`ve ever read that I found interesting. [And I`m a big Kerouac fan.] Yet my favorite author-on-author attacks are by Tom Wolfe—he demolished Mailer, Updike and John Irving in a great article once, and made Margaret Atwood look like the dithering liberal fool she is on TV once.
Ping.
I’m surprised these two didn’t make the list:
McCarthy on Lilian Hellman: “Every word she writes is a lie, including ‘and’ and ‘the.’”
Christopher Buckley on Tom Clancy: ‘’the James Fenimore Cooper of his day, which is to say, the most successful bad writer of his generation.’’ (This was followed by a war by faxes between the two.)
Boy there’s a LOT of truth to that.
I read a lot, and I mean a LOT. The level of pure crap out there is astonishing. You could save a ton of money by reading fan fiction on internet chat boards written be smitten teenage girls about ‘Twilight’ and get the same level of quality.
And I guarantee you that it’s the rare writer that does not think he’s God’s gift to the written word. Quite the disconnect from the actual quality of their product.
One of my favorite quotes on poetry is,
My favorite poem is the one that starts ‘Thirty days hath September’ because it actually tells you something.
Groucho Marx quote
It’s hard to believe that H.L. Mencken doesn’t make the list; he reviewed scores of books in the early-to-mid twentieth century and had an acerbic wit.
I don’t recall who said it or of whom it was spoken (could it have been Henry James?), but “The only problem with his novels is there is too much real estate between the covers.”
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