“Every imagined Utopia, from Plato to the present
day, helplessly becomes a Dystopia, almost certainly because the writers just
couldn’t resist the urge to make the ‘place’ sound halfway interesting.
Otherwise the Perfect Society is perfectly inhuman and perfectly inane. What
would you do all day in Utopia? And who now would turn to a map of the world in
a vain quest for the wastelands called Never Has Been, Never Could Be and Never
Should Be?”—English novelist-essayist Martin Amis, “The Deadliest Idealism,” in
The New York Times Book Review, Oct.
22, 2017, collected in The Rub of Time: Bellow, Nabokov, Hitchens, Travolta, Trump: Essays and Reportage,1994-2017 (2018)
(Photo of Martin Amis taken at the 2014 Texas Book Festival, Austin, Texas, by Larry D. Moore.)
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