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Untitled Ian Mcewan Novel
 
 

Untitled Ian Mcewan Novel (Paperback)

de Ian Mcewan (Author)
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Descriptions du produit

Books in Canada

Even among the top-tiered English-language novelists, Ian McEwan holds a privileged spot. His books have attracted the consistently large readership that, say, the beautiful but remote mandarinisms of John Banville and Don DeLillo have not. He’s been much more productive than careful wordsmith Marilynne Robinson and avoided the missteps of the more creatively incautious Martin Amis. In fact, his past writing has been almost critically unimpeachable, and among members of his generation, perhaps only J.M. Coetzee and Peter Carey have been the beneficiaries of equal award-committee largesse. (Indeed, McEwan was recently nominated for the newly created bi-annual Man Booker International Prize, prodded into the arena against august, and significantly older, personages like John Updike, Muriel Spark, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and Margaret Atwood.) His body of work, then, compares favourably with that of virtually any living writer. But how do his individual works fare in comparison with one another?
Saturday revisits the territory he began exploring in his earlier novels, The Comfort of Strangers and Enduring Love where, once again, a happy couple’s agreeable routine is horribly disrupted by the predations of an obsessive sociopath. The story is situated in London, 2003, and opens in the bedroom of Henry Perowne, a prominent neurosurgeon. He is wealthy, enfranchised, married to a formidable corporate lawyer, and the proud father of two precociously successful grown children. Within moments of our meeting him, however, an event occurs that underscores how fragile and beleaguered his, or anyone’s, happiness really is. He wakes before dawn-unprovoked by alarm clock, neighbourhood noise, or domestic discord-pads quietly to his window, and surveys the night sky just in time to watch a burning airliner tear low across the horizon. He stands motionless, silent, transfixed, “[c]ulpable in his helplessness,” watching “death on a large scale, but seeing no one die. No blood, no screams, no human figures at all, and into this emptiness, the obliging imagination set free.” Later, as the lurid and suggestive night gives way to the lucid day, Perowne learns that his “set free” imagination has roamed a little too far and wide. What he witnessed was “simple, secular mechanical failure,” and not, as he had feared, the final phase of some jihadist attack on the capital. Nevertheless, the tone has been set. That one crisis has been averted leaves us all the more certain that another is coalescing around Perowne as he carries on with his morning. Routine errands take on grand and even sinister potential. A drive to his regular weekend squash game forces him to navigate the protesters marching against the impending invasion of Iraq-and to confront his own uncomfortable thoughts on terrorism, tyranny, and the exercise of military power. And then, as a physical reminder of life’s more Hobbesian aspects, fate quickly sees him embroiled in an “urban drama” of his own. He has a minor car accident with three toughs in a BMW where, he knows, in the assignment of blame and swapping of insurance details, “[s]omeone is going to have to impose his will and win, and the other is going to give way.” There is more. Perowne’s squash game itself transmogrifies into an unnecessarily bitter, attritional struggle- every parry, feint, lunge, and stab is described over 14 laborious pages-which poisons his friendship with a co-worker. A visit with his elderly and senile mother in a nursing home is largely spent listening to her confused rants, her “shadowy disputes and grievances.” Even the shopping and cooking he does later in the afternoon is done in anticipation of a family dinner that will undoubtedly invite heated arguments from his daughter and cold condescension from his father-in-law. But as we all know by now, the narrative linchpin is Perowne’s earlier automotive mishap and its ensuing confrontation. It’s always surprising to encounter perceptive writing about violent stand-offs in literary fiction. Reliable descriptions of the physical blows are easy enough, extrapolated by the working author from any number of remembered televised spectacles. But when the psychology behind the stand-off has, as it does here, an authentic first-hand feel to it, the reader begins to wonder. How, exactly, does McEwan know that in these encounters, “there are rules as elaborate as the politesse of the Versailles court?” That fussy archaisms may slip into the more educated man’s speech when he decides not “to pretend to the language of the street?” That a “kick is less intimate, less involving than a punch, and one kick never quite seems enough?” (Martin Amis is good with these sequences, too, having astutely written that “violence is an ancient category error-except to the violent,” and that success in these contests “is endocrinological: a question of gland-management.” All of which begs the worrying question: where are these gentle men-of-letters doing their streetfighting?) In Perowne’s case, the merciless roadside thrashing he seems destined for is aborted. Seconds before he is pounded to the pavement by an angry torrent of limbs, he notices in one of his antagonists the early symptoms of a terminal neurological disease. To this man, Baxter, he hastily asserts his credentials and falsely claims access to a new medical treatment-enough to confuse Baxter’s unknowing henchman, temporarily beguile Baxter, and facilitate an escape. But instead of feeling elated, triumphant at this trauma-free outcome, he’s troubled by the ethical consequences of his deceit. The reader, meanwhile, is troubled for more pressing reasons, knowing that a vengeful Baxter will return before Perowne’s Saturday is through. In McEwan’s earlier books, we’re fed a surfeit of morbid detail about the pathologies of the given tormentors. In The Comfort of Strangers, the murderer’s behaviours are described at length by his battered but strangely complaisant wife; in Enduring Love, the stalker’s emotional disorder is exposed through a series of increasingly threatening love letters. Much of the books’ tension owes to the languid and skeptical responses of the protagonists; they continue to deny the full horror of what they’re confronting while the reader moans warnings at the page. By contrast, having chosen, in Saturday, to limit the timeline to 24 hours, McEwan has denied us that gradual aggregation of wormy, sickening detail. Baxter’s condition, his vulnerabilities and unhappy fate, are instantly made known to us through a clinician’s omniscient glance. And by endeavouring to depict people in this post 9/11 world-one where western psyches have been recalibrated to anticipate random violence-McEwan has created subjects who are perhaps too vigilant, decisive, and capable to play the victims we need them to be. The wash of fear we’ve gladly suffered before has here been diluted. But we don’t read McEwan only to seek out dark thrills. As always, there’s the pleasure to be found in his remarkably concise and accurate prose; there is, as well, the pleasure of meeting the mind-slightly disguised-of an intelligent author who has accumulated a vast store of observations that he renders to unsettling effect. Thus Perowne, a “realist” and self-described “professional reductionist,” looks out at London and “thinks the city is a success . . . millions teeming around the accumulated and layered achievements of the centuries, as though around a coral reef . . .” He watches two nurses coming off shift, and sees them “pass through the night, hot little biological engines with bipedal skills suited to any terrain, endowed with innumerable branching neural networks sunk deep in a knob of bone casing . . .” He performs brain surgery, and marvels “that mere wet stuff can make this bright inward cinema of thought, of sight and sound and touch bound into a vivid illusion of an instantaneous present, with a self, another brightly wrought illusion, hovering like a ghost at its centre.” Whatever dissatisfactions I might have felt with Saturday’s plot were speedily borne away by my delight in passages such as these.
There’s a point in the book when Perowne opines “that fiction is too humanly flawed, too sprawling and hit-and-miss to inspire uncomplicated wonder at the magnificence of human ingenuity . . .” Maybe so. But of all the writers currently at work, McEwan stands with very few others as one who can, at least, inspire more complexly formed feelings of deep admiration. Given the impoverished responses most of our entertainments drag out of us-typically boredom or a vague sense of insult-shouldn’t that be enough?
Matt Sturrock (Books in Canada)
--Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.


From Publishers Weekly

Crossley offers a smart, measured performance of McEwan's cerebral novel about an ominous day seen through the eyes of Henry Perowne, a reflective neurosurgeon whose comfortable life is shaken following a run-in with a street thug. Crossley's polished English accent is a fine accompaniment to a story that focuses on the people of privileged London, and while most of the novel consists of Perowne's narration, Crossley easily and subtly shifts into a handful of characters, including Perowne's wife, the jumpy goon Baxter and even a hawkish American anesthesiologist. But what truly suits Crossley's approach to the text is his cool, precise, almost distant tone. Perowne is a surgeon and, aside from his frequent ruminations and flights of thought, he is nothing in his actions if not cautious and calculating. In this way, events as far flung as a squash game and lovemaking are broken down in the churn of his mind and lead to conclusions not only about his own life but life in general. The plot has its moments of tension and suspense, but Crossley does an excellent job of capturing the book's real rewards: McEwan's intriguing examination of how we view ourselves, and how even the simplest events can snowball into complex moral dilemmas.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --Ce texte provient de la Audio CD édition.

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31 évaluations
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4.2étoiles sur 5 (31 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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3.0étoiles sur 5 Still love McEwan, Nov. 19 2007
Par Leah MacFarlane (Vancouver, BC) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Ce commentaire est de: Saturday (Paperback)
Although this is not one of his best, this still was a classic engrossing Ian McEwan read.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Remarkable, Memorable and Beyond Category, Sep 18 2007
Par Road King (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
Ce commentaire est de: Saturday (Paperback)
There are few novelists today who can write transformative fiction. McEwan is one of them.
This is a story well suited for its middle aged readership, exploring the joys and fears of life at the beginning of the 21st century. McEwan writes prose that simply stops you in your tracks with his insights, making you re-read a paragraph just to taste it again. A book like this reminds me of a fine vintage wine, with an aftertaste which will linger for quite some time. Definitely worth reading.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 ok story, Sep 15 2007
Ce commentaire est de: Saturday (Paperback)
good details about medical aspects but the plot really isn't page turning
i somehow finished the book
i have not looked for another book by the author yet and don't think i will
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Bowled over.
Having been disappointed by Atonement, I expected little from this book. I was surprised to find myself enthralled from the first word. Lisez davantage
Publié le Juil 16 2007 par Samantha

5.0étoiles sur 5 Action-packed! Romantic! Gripping! . . . and introspective?
Taking us through one day of Henry Perowne's life must, in less than 300 pages, necessarily result in an "action packed" story. Lisez davantage
Publié le Jui 9 2006 par Stephen A. Haines

5.0étoiles sur 5 A MOVING STORY
Saturday brilliantly depicts life in a post 9/11 environment and successfully portrays a world of divergent but understandable differences. Lisez davantage
Publié le Avril 26 2006 par Pius

4.0étoiles sur 5 Not my usual cup-o-tea
SATURDAY is not something I would normally pick up. Being more prone to a bestseller, Oprah pick, or cult classic (you know the ones I'm talking about----DA VINCI by Brown,... Lisez davantage
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Thought Provoking
This is a very interesting novel, compelling at times, that reminds us of the power each day of our lives can bring. Lisez davantage
Publié le Janv. 24 2006 par Bea Zolis

1.0étoiles sur 5 Could not finish this book
I very rarely abandon a book without finishing but I just could not get into this book. I did not care about the characters and found the story to be completely pointless. Lisez davantage
Publié le Janv. 12 2006 par JBB

1.0étoiles sur 5 Saturday
It was so boring I threw it in the garbage.
Publié le Déc 31 2005 par Susan Watts

5.0étoiles sur 5 Provocative and Complex
"SATURDAY" is a highly provocative novel of complex plots and characters. You have to pay attention to truly enjoy it, but that shouldn't be a problem because the... Lisez davantage
Publié le Aoû 4 2005 par Adrienne Moss

4.0étoiles sur 5 One great book!
In my quest for the next best thing, I ran across SATURDAY. While I hadn't read ATONEMENT, I was still cautiously optimistic, given the fact that sometimes the term... Lisez davantage
Publié le Jui 29 2005 par ,Cheryl Phillip

5.0étoiles sur 5 Not just an old day of the week--your favorite--and mine
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