Crotchety Old Men

Posted by Jacques Chester on Tuesday, June 17, 2008

If my Dad is anything to go by, they get grumpier and funnier as time wears on.

See also the latest interview with Gore Vidal:

How did you feel when you heard that [famous US conservative William F.] Buckley died this year? I thought hell is bound to be a livelier place, as he joins forever those whom he served in life, applauding their prejudices and fanning their hatred.



This entry was posted on Tuesday, June 17th, 2008 at 6:10 PM and filed under Humour, Life. Follow comments here with the RSS 2.0 feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.

5 Responses to “Crotchety Old Men”

  1. JC said:

    I think they hated each other.

  2. John Greenfield said:

    In that case, no doubt Hell has long arranged slippers, a wee dram or two, and a nice cozy pouffe for Gore to sit on, in anticipation of his inevitable descension;)

  3. Jason Soon said:

    what about crochety old women?

    http://www.nationalpost.com/scripts/story.html?id=483710

    Michel Houellebecq, the shock-a-minute bad boy of the French book world, may have met his literary match in his own mother, who has penned a tell-all novel calling her son a “liar” and “parasite.” In his seminal 1998 novel Les particules elementaires Houellebecq vented a lifetime of anger against his mother, pictured, by portraying her as an egocentric, sexually promiscuous hippie who neglected her children. Now it’s payback time. Lucie Ceccaldi, 83, has published her own book, The Innocent One, in which she heaps insults on her son. “My son can go and get screwed by whomever he wants, he can write another book, I don’t give a toss,” she says in one excerpt. “But if he has the misfortune of sticking my name on anything again he’ll get my walking stick in his face and that’ll knock his teeth out,” she says in what newspapers described as a typical sample.

  4. Helen said:

    Go granny, go!

  5. Chris Lloyd said:

    “Well, it was a great pleasure talking to you. Answer from Vidal: I doubt that.” Probably the truthiest part of the interview.

    I find Vidal an utterly appalling character, an intellectual snob whose main skill is thinking up witty forms of personal abuse on the spot. Well, Ben Elton does it much better than him and isn’t a bitter old c…

Leave a Reply

 

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.