Fernanda Amis 

My dad Martin Amis loved a gangster film – but hated my plays

In this speech she gave at last week’s memorial service for the author, who died last year aged 73, his daughter pays tribute to ‘the cool guy who lived in my house’
  
  

Martin Amis. photographed before speaking at the Edinburgh International Book Festival in Scotland on 24 August 2014.
Martin Amis. photographed before speaking at the Edinburgh International Book Festival in Scotland on 24 August 2014. Photograph: Murdo Macleod/The Guardian

Dad described himself as a “father emeritus”. This wouldn’t have been funny if it were completely true. In fact, far from absent, Dad was home all of the time. In high school, I described him to my friends as less a dad-type and more a cool guy who lived in my house.

Once, at the age of 14, I was caught by my mum smoking pot in my bedroom. She threw out my paraphernalia, took me around the block weeping, and cautioned me about the great history of addiction in our family. Later that night, or maybe even a few days later, Dad made his debut on the top floor of the house, the kids’ floor. He poked his head around my door and said: “You couldn’t have cracked open a window? You bloody fool.”

He was cool, and he wasn’t didactic. Although he taught me many things by example. To be suspicious of the humourless, the self-peddling, the ideological and the religious. To come to books and films on my own. I would ask him for recommendations, but he wouldn’t give any. He knew I’d develop my own taste, and library, and we could talk about them then. Films were slightly different – if he was watching, he would always pick. Samples include the first quarter of Airplane!, the last third of Pulp Fiction, Groundhog Day once a year, the car chase in Bullitt – or really any car chase; any gangster, western or alien-oriented film.

I shared his dislike for tattoos and plays. Still, twice he saw me in the school play, and even sat in the front row – not remotely trying to hide the blue light and cloud from his (nicotine) vape. The plays that I was in were always avant garde slogs he and I both hated (my lines tended to be in the form of bird calls), and I understood and respected his decision to leave at the intermission, I really did. It was important. As if to say… “be faithful to your own taste”, and “you can be supportive without being untrue to yourself”.

Dad didn’t care about what teams we were on or what colleges we went to. He cared that we were engaged, and funny, and had convictions, and were true to them. He loved my drawings and my impressions. I have never seen him more proud of me than the time I beat him in Scrabble with a score of 409.

We enjoyed Dad so much, and he enjoyed us.

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