Cold-Shouldered 
James Wood
- Pure Pleasure: A Guide to the 20th Century’s Most Enjoyable Books by John Carey
John Carey’s new book, like his last one, The Intellectuals and the Masses, is a little swizzle-stick perfectly designed for flattening airy literary bubbles. Surprisingly, it is likable, wise and often right, the more so in tending to contradict The Intellectuals and the Masses, which had none of these qualities. The enemy has stayed the same – roughly, overweening literary Modernism. Has Carey’s curious Oxonian populism truly changed, or just, as it were, moved colleges?
Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.
James Wood’s How Fiction Works is just out. He is also the author of The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief and is a staff writer at the New Yorker.
Other articles by this contributor:
Puffed Wheat · How serious is John Bayley?
A Frog’s Life · Coetzee’s Confessions
The Slightest Sardine · a literary dragnet
Mixed Feelings · Italo Svevo’s Last Cigarette
Addicted to Unpredictability · Knut Hamsun
Damaged Beasts · Peter Carey’s ‘Theft’
The Lie-World · D.B.C. Pierre
Fundamentally Goyish · Zadie Smith