- Current Books
- The Blaze of Obscurity
- North Face of Soho
- The Revolt of the Pendulum
- Reviews
- Extracts
- Bea Miles, Vagrant
- Crime Movie Music
- On Modern Australian Painting
- On American Movie Critics
- On A.D. Hope
- Perfectly Bad Sentence
- Insult to the Language
- On Camille Paglia
- On John Bayley
- On John Anderson
- On Elias Canetti
- Starting with Sludge
- On Jonathan James-Moore
- On Ian Adam
- On Diamond Jim McClelland
- On Nicole Kidman
- Show Me the Horror
- On Niki Lauda
- On Damon Hill
- On Pat Kavanagh
- Artists in Exile
- On Leni Riefenstahl
- On British Films
- The Writer's Revenge
- Exit Roth's Ghost
- On Crime Fiction
- Saying Famous Things
- The Question of Karl Kraus
- Kingsley Amis Biography
- The Robert Hughes Memoirs
- Happiness Writes White
- The Meaning of Recognition
- Angels Over Elsinore
- Opal Sunset
- The Book of My Enemy
- As Of This Writing
- Cultural Amnesia
- Books Out of Print




Already a star agent in the days before there were any others, Pat Kavanagh had the glamour to reduce most men and not a few women to slavery. She was beautiful, clever and loved to laugh, but she could also have a blunt way with a fool. Since most writers are fools, especially about money, a new client was likely to find his dreams being set straight quite early in the relationship. I can’t speak for her other clients – she never spoke about them either – but in general I would be surprised if there were any who were spared a close encounter with brute reality when she first explained to them why it would be unwise to start living like Donald Trump on the assumption that the next advance would be as big as the last one.