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About the Author Terence Blacker is a columnist for the Independent. Read more
H**S
Kill Your Darlings - Wow! It's Remarkable!
This book was the most fun I've had reading in quite a while - wonderful dark humor! Yes, it is satire, but somehow, a more realistic form of satire than one generally encounters. It is unique! Can a work be blatant and subtle at the same time? This was a fabulous find for me - and I am so glad I didn't miss this one.The wry and snidely grandiose voice of the protagonist Gregory Keays is just marvelous. I thought I'd completely understood Mr. Keays, but his character held some surprises for me as the story moved on. The supporting "cast" members are excellently drawn, and we see them through the sardonic view of the narrator. And while he harbors exalted thoughts of his own one-book success (written 15 years ago), he is at work compiling a book of lists about authors. I think he was listing Authors with Red Hair, when the book started to take some surprising turns.Everything Keays says about the creative writing seminar he teaches is so perfectly on target. Having been in one of these seminars, I was amazed to "see" myself in the collection of characters around the table.I have so much admiration for Mr. Blacker's book, I just want another. An amazing piece of work ... worthy of a second read, which I am about to start this evening.Cheers for Mr. Blacker!
S**A
One of my favorite novels
I wish this guy would write another novel. Kill Your Darlings is an absolute gem -- funny, twisted, and clever as hell. It's told from the point of view of a washed-up, one-hit-wonder writer, who now teaches at a community college and has been working interminably on a trivia book about other writers. Each turn of the page provides a hilarious, outrageous surprise. Our hero is pretentious, pedantic, preening, vain, and resentful (especially of Martin Amis, who he views as a peer, but who "affected to not remember" our hero! at a conference). To say more about this book I'd have to give away some of the delightful plot turns. Trust me, this book is a twisted riot.
J**R
A Writer Writing about a Writer Writing
Kill Your Darlings is a great find. If you are a writer, or an aspiring one, you will love the dark humor in this book, which follows an author bereft of new ideas who finds inspiration in a surprising and twisted way. I love the protagonist's sardonic humor, and the book's continuous self-referential, self-conscious remarks. As the British say, wicked fun.
G**A
Boaring
Slow read, boaring to me. I ony purchased the book because Daniel Radcliffe is staring in the movie that is due to come out.
M**H
An excellent psychological character novel
Gregory Keays is a writer whose future is, as they say, behind him. One novel, a short period spent on the "young writers to watch" list, and the only thing he has produced since is a dozen unfinished novels and a series of not-yet-published volumes about other writers. He writes a column for a writer's magazine and teaches a writing class at a local institute, while his wife has become one of London's leading interior decorators, earning far more money than he ever will. His relationship with his teenage son is terrible. Gregory's envy of those who were once, potentially, his peers has been eating his guts out for years. Most of those working writers, in his opinion, are mere authors; only he is a real "writer." This is especially true of his opinion of Martin Amis -- whom he always refers to as "Martin." (One must wonder about the true relationship between Amis and Blacker, if any. . . .) Then Peter Gibson shows up in his class and Gregory recognizes true talent. He casts himself as Peter's guide to the literary world -- and discovers the young writer has just completed an amazingly mature, groundbreaking novel. A novel that should have been his. Will be his.This book started out witty and ruefully funny; you shake your head while smiling at Gregory's corrosive ego and self-delusion. After awhile, though, he's not so funny. And by the denouement -- which I, for one, did not see coming -- he has become downright scary. This study of the decay of an admittedly intelligent man's self-image is a remarkable piece of work.
P**X
A Black Comedy for the Publishing World
Most English majors think they have a novel or two in them; after reading this book I think I want to avoid the publishing world all together. Writers can be so mean and petty toward each other! That's the impression we get from this dark look at writing and the writing lifestyle, and I loved every page of it. Blacker puts in these lists of famous writers and their quirks (what they did to unblock themselves; quips about their art) that would make a good book on their own (I guess he is working on one that will be out soon). This book is unlike anything I have ever read: Keays seems so honest and trustworthy as first person narrator, but he turns out to be pond scum. And what a surprise ending! It's one of those books where you finish it and start right back at the beginning to see if there was any inkling early on that it would end the way that it did. There isn't, I checked. I thoroughly enjoyed it!
J**T
No one reads the three star reviews
A novel I enjoyed for the bit about literary groupies, the female literary agent who swears a lot, and the fact that the main character can't bring himself to mention the novels of Martin Amis by name. Also for its readability. Minus marks for being a thriller with no tension, unconvincing plot developments, clichéd characters (moody teenage son, low-life gangster), poor dialogue, and a bland prose style: I could've done without the constant use of the word `swagger' in relation to Mart's prose, and fellatio prissily described with the phrase `I took him in my mouth'. Why not just say you sucked his ****? Also, the copy I had was very poorly proofread. Seems like your publishers don't earn their money, Terence. Terence Blacker has a great name by the way. Gregory Keays is also a good name for a character (unlike his agent, Fay Duckworth, who has a crap name). Terence and Gregory are the names of the characters in Martin's novel about failure.
P**R
Five Stars
great
B**S
Worth reading good book
Read and enjoy this book
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