10 Legendary Bad Boys of Literature

Kingsley Amis

Unlike Houellebecq, there’s not too many naysayers when it comes to Amis’ literary prowess — he was lauded almost universally as one of the greatest comic novelists of the late 20th century, and won several awards, including a Booker prize and um, knighthood. After the publication of his first novel, Lucky Jim, Amis became associated with the writers known as the “Angry Young Men” — a nebulous group of working and middle-class British writers, often characterized by a disillusionment with society. Plus, like any self-respecting literary bad boy, he was a serious drinker, writing in one of his memoirs, “Now and then I become conscious of having the reputation of being one of the great drinkers, if not one of the great drunks, of our time.”

Filed Under:

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest

& did anyone mention dylan thomas yet?

CATULLUS CATULLUS MY GOD CATULLUS Writer of the most outrageous insult in the history of the human race: "The woman that would handle this man would as willingly lick the arsehole of a leprous hangman."

Christopher Marlowe; Samuel Taylor Coleridge; Thomas Chatterton; Edgar Allen Poe; Charles Baudelaire; Arthur Rimbaud; Paul Verlaine; Algernon Swinburne; Wyndham Lewis; Vladimir Mayakovsky; Louis-Fernand Céline; Ezra Pound; Ernest Hemingway; Martin Heidegger; Jean Genet; Robert Lowell; William S. Burroughs; Jack Kerouac; Hunter S. Thompson; Amiri Baraka; Derek Walcott; Edmund White; and Roberto Bolaño.

This list is laughable. Excluding the obvious Bukowski, Thompson, and others listed above while including Frey and Franzen makes me question whether Ms. Temple (the article's author) reads much.

Please...history provides glorious examples from Christopher Marlowe to William Burroughs, Arthur Rimbaud to H.G. Wells, but Jonathan Franzen makes the cut because he's kind of pompous and full of himself, like that annoying professor whose name you can't quite remember?

Seriously disappointed not to see Charles Bukowski & Hunter S. Thompson on the list.

I agree that Rimbaud should have been included, instead of Frey and would have switched Byron out for Celine

Clearly Rimbaud, Genet and Louis Ferdinand Celine were far more terrible and talented than you give them credit for...

Irvine Welsh?! Where is he?

Burroughs for sure. Dylan Thomas. Brendan Behan. Truman Capote. Jim Harrison? Tom McGuane once upon a time. But James Frey, please -- fraud disqualifies him even if he could write, and now he's a lamprey on the face of the reputation of publishing. Start a new category for him, Disgrace say, or Thug.

Oh C'mon. No beats? (Junky Burroughs, alcoholic and womanizing Kerouac?) No Hunter S Thompson? (Drugs, shotguns and trashing hotels?) No Bukowski?! He's the consumate literary badboy. Frankly his absence from this list is ludicrous. No Wilde? Ludicrous No Hemingway? Bull fighting, alcoholism and womanizing? Really terrible list frankly.

Genet, Goodis, Thompson, Rimbaud, Burroughs, Andros, Trocchi, MacClaren- Ross...the list goes on. Most of these lads are lightweights. Yes, women next please?

Next up: literary bad women. Please. Also, Amis is great. 'Money' and 'London Fields' are enough to cement it.

Oooh, Jonathan Franzen! The baddest birdwatcher in town!

I'm currently reading the new biography of the ultimate literary bad boy -- "Alfred Jarry, a Pataphysical Life" by Alistair Brotchie. Great stuff! Jarry should head the list, both his life and work are outrageous.

Michael LaRocca, definitely.

Damn guys... what about an ounce of copy-editing? Nearly every page is riddled with typos... I'm riddled by this.

Such a predictable snooze...Wake me when you cover the Bad GIRLS of Literature.

How could you leave out Hunter S. Thompson, the Prince of Gonzo, one of the best and most self-destructive writers of our times.

Oh my goodness, you forgot Bret Easton Ellis

The late Christopher Hitchens.

Norman Mailer & James Frey are total douche bags. Mailer for having his lips wrapped firmly around Jack Henry Abbot's dick after JHA stabbed a waiter in NYC, Frey for being a mediocre writer and exceptionally bad liar. Why is Tom Wolfe not here? Kurt Vonnegut? Surely you could fabricate some misdeed/excesses for them. Throw in Larry McMurtry, he drinks a lot and is afraid of computers ooh that's bad too.

Charles Bukowski Henry Miller Bret Easton Ellis

William Burroughs Hunter S. Thompson Jean Genet Charles Bukowski any list of bad boys is straight laced without these writers.

No Rimbaud? He's only the original rebel without a cause but w.e.

+1 for Hunter S. Thompson. At least consider these: Tom McCarthy Oscar Wilde Edgar Allen Poe Ernest Hemingway Ken Kesey

No Frank Harris No List

James Frey? Really? I'll give you Martin Amis, though I think he's overrated. Frey, though, as yet to earn any literary chops. One controversy over a poorly written book does not make you a bad boy of literature, especially since when your input barely qualifies as literature.

I have to disagree about Martin Amis. He's not lousy with talent, just lousy. Have you ever read "London Fields"? Perhaps the worst written book I have ever come across, although "Dead Babies", which he also wrote, is up there. But on a side note, what does him standing next to Ian McEwan smoking cigarettes in the 70's have to do with arguments about the merit of his work? Surely those arguments would stem from perceived nepotism in regards to his success despite talent, rather than the fact he may have hung out with another terribly dull writer with similarly farcical fears of the lower class.