
Best of the Spectator The Book Club: Howard Jacobson
Mar 19, 2026
Howard Jacobson, Booker Prize–winning novelist known for comic and literary fiction, discusses his new novel Howl. He explains why a novel can do what journalism cannot. He explores using dark comedy amid rage, a furious narrator confronting moral panic, shifting attitudes toward Israel, and Shakespearean tragic textures.
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Why Fiction Handles Rage Better Than Journalism
- A novel lets angry ideas be dramatized rather than preached.
- Howard Jacobson says fiction lets a character voice rage so the book can distance and become ironically comic, unlike a march or journalism.
Let Comedy Emerge Rather Than Force It
- Use comedy as a tool to process darkness rather than as a lightening ingredient.
- Jacobson advises letting comedy arise uncontrollably from character and situation, because forced comedy fails.
The Carnival Inversion After The Massacre
- The post-massacre response felt like a moral carnival that inverted values.
- Jacobson describes good becoming bad and previously taboo acts being normalized, which fuels his protagonist's astonishment.







