Partial Bibliography
- 1947 Bright November
- 1953 A Frame of Mind
- 1954 Poems: Fantasy Portraits.
- 1954 Lucky Jim
- 1955 That Uncertain Feeling
- 1956 A Case of Samples: Poems 1946–1956.
- 1957 Socialism and the Intellectuals. A Fabian Society pamphlet
- 1958 I Like it Here
- 1960 Take A Girl Like You
- 1960 New Maps of Hell: a Survey of Science Fiction
- 1960 Hemingway in Space (short story), Punch December 1960
- 1962 My Enemy's Enemy
- 1962 The Evans County
- 1963 One Fat Englishman
- 1965 The Egyptologists (with Robert Conquest).
- 1965 The James Bond Dossier
- 1965 The Book of Bond, or Every Man His Own 007 (pseud. Lt.-Col William ('Bill') Tanner)
- 1966 The Anti-Death League
- 1968 Colonel Sun: a James Bond Adventure (pseud. Robert Markham)
- 1968 I Want It Now
- 1968 A Look Round the Estate: Poems, 1957–1967
- 1969 The Green Man
- 1970 What Became of Jane Austen?, and Other Questions
- 1971 Girl, 20
- 1972 On Drink
- 1973 The Riverside Villas Murder
- 1974 Ending Up
- 1974 Rudyard Kipling and his World
- 1975 The Crime Of The Century
- 1976 The Alteration
- 1978 Jake's Thing
- 1978 The New Oxford Book of Light Verse (ed.)
- 1979 Collected Poems 1944–78
- 1980 Russian Hide-and-Seek
- 1980 Collected Short Stories
- 1983 Everyday Drinking
- 1984 How's Your Glass?
- 1984 Stanley and the Women
- 1986 The Old Devils
- 1988 Difficulties With Girls
- 1990 The Folks That Live on the Hill
- 1990 The Amis Collection
- 1991 Memoirs
- 1991 Mr Barrett's Secret and Other Stories
- 1991 We Are All Guilty
- 1992 The Russian Girl
- 1994 You Can't Do Both
- 1995 The Biographer's Moustache
- 1997 The King's English: A Guide to Modern Usage (name in part a pun as he was sometimes called "Kingers" or "The King" by friends and family, as told by his son Martin in his memoir Experience)
- 2001 The Letters of Kingsley Amis, Edited by Zachary Leader
- 2008 Everyday Drinking, Introduction by Christopher Hitchens
Read more about this topic: Kingsley Amis
Famous quotes containing the word partial:
“The one-eyed man will be King in the country of the blind only if he arrives there in full possession of his partial facultiesthat is, providing he is perfectly aware of the precise nature of sight and does not confuse it with second sight ... nor with madness.”
—Angela Carter (19401992)
Related Phrases
Related Words