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
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“The only coöperation which is commonly possible is exceedingly partial and superficial; and what little true coöperation there is, is as if it were not, being a harmony inaudible to men. If a man has faith, he will coöperate with equal faith everywhere; if he has not faith, he will continue to live like the rest of the world, whatever company he is joined to.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)