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Ian McEwan

British · b. 1948

7 books reviewed Avg rating 4.0 / 5Top rating 4.2 / 5

Booker Prize 1998 (Amsterdam); Booker Prize shortlist multiple times

Ian McEwan is a British novelist and Booker Prize winner whose precise, psychologically acute fiction includes Atonement, Saturday, and Enduring Love.

Ian McEwan is one of the most technically accomplished British novelists of the past half-century, with a career spanning from the unsettling early short fiction collected in First Love, Last Rites to the more expansive social and historical novels of his maturity. He writes with a coldly precise attention to psychological states — particularly under stress, grief, or moral pressure — that gives even his most ordinary-seeming scenarios an underlying tension. His reputation rests especially on Atonement (2001) and Saturday (2005), both of which demonstrate his ability to use a specific moment in time as a lens through which to examine larger questions about history, consciousness, and responsibility.

Atonement is structurally ingenious: a novel about a child’s false accusation and its consequences, which also becomes, in its final section, a meditation on the relationship between fiction and truth, guilt and self-forgiveness. Saturday confines itself to a single day in the life of a London neurosurgeon on the eve of the 2003 Iraq War protests, using the precision of its time frame to examine liberal, privileged consciousness under threat. Both books reward close reading, and McEwan’s sentences — balanced, exact, occasionally beautiful — are pleasures in themselves.

The critiques of McEwan are familiar: some find his work emotionally cool, his plots overly reliant on single dramatic reversals, and his fictional world predominantly upper-middle-class and metropolitan. The Solar (2010), a satire on climate science and male ego, was received more ambivalently. But at his best — in Enduring Love, The Child in Time, and the two major novels mentioned above — McEwan achieves something rare: fiction that is simultaneously rigorous and gripping.

7 Books Reviewed

Atonement book cover
Bestseller

Atonement

by Ian McEwan

4.2

In 1935, a thirteen-year-old girl's false accusation destroys two lives — and she spends the rest of hers trying to atone for it through the act of writing.

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On Chesil Beach book cover
Editor's Pick

On Chesil Beach

by Ian McEwan

4.2

Edward and Florence are married in 1962 and arrive at their hotel on the Dorset coast. The wedding night goes catastrophically wrong. In the final pages, McEwan shows the fifty years that follow from a single, irreversible misunderstanding.

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The Children Act book cover

The Children Act

by Ian McEwan

4.1

Fiona Maye, a High Court judge in London, must rule on whether a seventeen-year-old Jehovah's Witness may refuse a life-saving blood transfusion on religious grounds. The case intersects with the collapse of her marriage.

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Saturday book cover

Saturday

by Ian McEwan

4.0

Henry Perowne, a neurosurgeon in London, experiences a single extraordinary Saturday in February 2003 — the day of the anti-Iraq-War march — that escalates into a confrontation with violence.

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Machines Like Me book cover

Machines Like Me

by Ian McEwan

3.9

An alternative 1980s London where Alan Turing survived and the first synthetic humans have just been manufactured. Charlie buys one — Adam — and shares custody of it with Miranda, his upstairs neighbour. A love triangle and the questions it raises about consciousness and moral status.

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Enduring Love book cover

Enduring Love

by Ian McEwan

3.8

A picnic in the Chilterns is interrupted when a hot-air balloon accident brings two strangers together. One of them — Joe Rose, a science journalist — becomes the obsessive focus of the other's deranged love. McEwan's clinical thriller dissects the boundary between reason and madness.

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Amsterdam book cover

Amsterdam

by Ian McEwan

3.7

Two old friends — a composer and a newspaper editor — make a mutual euthanasia pact at the funeral of their shared former lover. When each betrays his professional principles in ways the other finds unconscionable, dark comedy escalates toward catastrophic irony.

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