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Theater

January 2001

The measure of smartness

by Mark Steyn

Iought to declare an interest: I do not intend to say anything nice about Reading Lyrics, [1] the new magnum opus edited by Robert Gottlieb and Robert Kimball, because Mr. Gottlieb, one of the grand panjandrums of American letters, was snotty about me in The New York Times. So nuts to him: I regard him, in that useful British expression, as a complete pillock. It’s all personal, and we should not pretend otherwise. (Martin Peretz, in The New Republic the other day, loftily deplored an “ugly” column by “one Mark Steyn.” That “one” is an exquisite and characteristically American touch—they teach it in journalism school, I believe. Mr. Peretz knows full well who I am, as the only reason he’s sniping at me is because, in an entirely different column, I sniped at him; he had criticized Governor Bush for calling his dog “Spot” and I pointed out that, ...

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Mark Steyn’s most recent book is America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It (Regnery)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 19 January 2001, on page 40
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