Babbington Books

Books in the Arcade of Allusions

The Place Is Babbington, That Is to Say Nowhere

Death Can Do No More Than Kill You

No Fusion Between These Souls

A Person I Hate in Particular

On Certain People Who Are Beyond Help

Angel Confers with Her Publisher

Valéry on Fashion and Art

Little Satisfaction in Posthumous Fame

Let Us Go Back, If We Can

Angel: Novelist in Trouble

The Satirist Is Usually a Pretty Unpopular Fellow

I wonder if any of you have ever noticed that it is sometimes those who find most pleasure and amusement in their fellow man, and have most hope in his goodness, who get the reputation of being his most carping critics. Maybe it is that the satirist is so full of the possibilities of humankind in general, that he tends to draw a dark and garish picture when he tries to depict people as they are at any particular moment. The satirist is usually a pretty unpopular fellow. The only time he attains even fleeting popularity is when his works can be used by some political faction as a stick to beat out the brains of their opponents. Satirical writing is by definition unpopular writing. Its aim is to prod people into thinking. Thinking hurts.

John Dos Passos
(1957, from the speech he delivered upon accepting the Gold Medal for Eminence in Fiction from the National Institute of Arts and Letters)
  

The Peronal History, Adventures, Experiences & Observations of Peter Leroy



Copyright © 2013 by Eric Kraft. All rights reserved. Photographs by Eric Kraft.