However when he got to the British novelists, he suggestions seemed a little less certain. He though Ballard and Grey might survive and possibly Martin Amis but was dismissive of McEwan, Rushdie, Swift.
It got me thinking about British fiction and the potential lack of a major British post war novelist. At first i thought i may be blinkered by an American-centric, Bloomian view of contemporary fiction (or the American tendency to self-aggrandizement). But then standing back a little, i honestly couldn't think of a British novel that i have read which stands up to the key works of their American counterparts. Personally i don't think any of the British authors Self mentions would even get a look in (with the possible exception of Ballard for flat out vision). Notwithstanding the supposed modern renaissance of the Amis/Rushdie/McEwan years, James Wood has said that the last major English novelists were Woolf, Lawrence and Green. (with the possible exception of Naipul who i haven't read). Just wondering if others had some broad thoughts on this topic.
(BTW i realise that English fiction isn't comprised solely of British and America novelists, it's just a comparison that peaked my interest. I'm also painting with a broad brush here, too broad most probably but again, it seemed a ripe topic )