With, The Children Act, hitting the cinema
this week, I thought it apt to do my next author focus.
So, for this post, Ian McEwan, author of
the aforementioned, and such books that you may recognise from previous
visits to the cinema as, Enduring Love, with Daniel Craig and Rhys Ifans,
On Chesil Beach with Saoirse Ronan and of course, Atonement with Vanessa
Redgrave and Keira Knightley, and, let’s not forget last year's excellent BBC
adaptation of, The Child in Time, with Benedict Cumberbatch.
So, it's fair to say that at some time or
another, most of you would have come across something written by this author,
but, how many of you have actually read one of his books?
I confess that the extent of my reading is
what you see in the picture on the left, so, no Atonement then, and I've yet to read his
latest novel, but most of what I have read, I have enjoyed - some more than others of
course.
Solar, was one that I didn’t really get on
with, along with, The Daydreamer, but Sweet Tooth was excellent, capturing the
dim, smoke filled offices and soot covered buildings of the 1970's very
convincingly and along with Saturday, which takes us through one particular
Saturday in the life of an eminent neurosurgeon, from a mundane traffic
collision, through an epic squash match, to a climax that had me reading at
double speed, they rank as my favourite McEwan books to date.
His novels aren't long, (so no excuses),
with most not even making three hundred pages, and they can lack a bit for
their brevity, but what you do get is an intense ride, intense characters and
in some cases - Enduring Love being the one that really stands out for me -
something that sticks with you. (The appendix in Enduring Love is worth buying
the book for alone).
So, whether you like books narrated by a foetus,
a child who time travels, young married couples who fear intimacy, or raving madmen
who become infatuated, there seems to be something for everyone here, and
hopefully, as long as McEwan keeps writing, we’ll get some excellent viewing
pleasure too.
So, the film: Emma Thompson in the lead
role, Ian McEwan as the writer, set in my old home town of London, what more
could I want? (Maybe I'll let you know once I've seen it).
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