On Negative Book Reviewing: Audio Interview with John Metcalf

I recently interviewed Canadian critic, editor, writer John Metcalf on his love of Books and Book Collecting. The same afternoon we talked also about the process of book reviewing, whether or not the use of insult and/or invective is ever justified and if so, when. John is known as a ‘blunt’ critic; one who tells his unsugared truths directly, who is not reticent to attack ‘with savagery’ books he feels insult him. The conversation refers, among other things, to the Salon des Refuses exercise undertaken by Canadian Notes and Queries and The New Quarterly magazines, personal slights, the problem of awarding the same prizes to authors of widely varying talents, and the importance to healthy literary culture of truth-telling critics.
Lengthy sentence alert: There are familiar attacks on M.G. Vassanji, Ann Marie MacDonald, and Robertson Davies here, and there is praise too for many young Canadian short story writers, but perhaps the most evident feature of this discussion is Metcalf’s anger, precipitated, I’d say, primarily by a combative dedication to serving a cause larger than himself – excellence in literature – aggravated in small part both by the perceived inability of Canadians to recognize literary greatness, and personal rejection at the hands of this country’s ‘literary establishment’ – bolstered by a natural taste for confrontation and a glee in the fighting of a good fight.
Please listen here:
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Related posts:
- On Book Collecting. Audio Interview with John Metcalf by Nigel Beale
- Audio Interview with John Metcalf: The role of the Editor
- John Leonard on Dale Peck and Responsible Book Reviewing
- Audio Interview with Eric Lorberer, Editor, Rain Taxi by Nigel Beale: On the Book Reviewing Business
- Audio Interview with John Freeman, President of the National Book Critics Circle, by Nigel Beale.






May 15th, 2009 at 1:20 PM
In listening to Mr Metcalf’s “A Headmaster’s Disgust” here, I was reminded of this simple assessment over here, http://tinyurl.com/quzkg2.
A taste: “…Metcalf is much better at identifying symptoms than diagnosing the underlying illness, and he is no good at all at prescribing a cure – his beloved “aesthetic approach†to literature being just as likely to lead to empty, middlebrow doily-making as to James Joyce.”
Uh-oh. That’s from Quill & Quire…