Phut-Phut

James Wood

  • Critical Times: The History of the ‘Times Literary Supplement’ by Derwent May
    HarperCollins, 606 pp, £25.00, November 2001, ISBN 0 00 711449 4

There is a story that Gershom Scholem, the scholar of Jewish mysticism, was being introduced at a lecture in New York. Mysticism, the introducer said sarcastically, is nothing; but a history of nothing – well, that is science. The same can be said, multipliedly, of Derwent May’s book, which is essentially a history of the book review, a genre of such tiny dignity that its life might better be left unexamined. Over large portions, this book is about nothing – or, nothing more than the weekly phut-phut of the English literary establishment. It is a book in which the reader learns how to endure, if never quite outwit, a dark regime of sentences such as ‘One feature for which the Lit Supp has always been famous is its cantankerous letters,’ or ‘One of the happiest events for the Lit Supp in 1916 was Virginia Woolf’s return in the spring to health, and to its reviewing team.’

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Vol. 24 No. 12 · 27 June 2002 » James Wood » Phut-Phut (print version)
Pages 11-12 | 2972 words