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On Chesil Beach by Ian McEwan
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On Chesil Beach

by Ian McEwan

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
3,904182619 (3.67)228
Info:

Nan A Talese Doubleday (2007), Paperback, 203 pages

Member:keywestnan
Collections:KWLS author, Your libraryRating:***1/2
Tags:fiction, british, marriage, Key West Literary Seminar

Member recommendations

  1. whitewavedarling recommends The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
  2. kiwiflowa recommends The Sea by John Banville, "same introspective feel and prose etc"
  3. akfarrar recommends The Heart of the Matter by Graham Greene, "Another serious book with marriage at the heart of it and the tug of war between being an individual and uniting with an 'other'. Both deal with a generation (see more) of people on the edge of change and with matters both earthly and spiritual."
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English (166)  Dutch (6)  Swedish (2)  Danish (2)  Italian (1)  Portuguese (1)  Spanish (1)  Norwegian (1)  German (1)  French (1)  All languages (182)
Showing 1-5 of 166 (next | show all)
On Chesil Beach is the second work of McEwan I've read, the other, of course, the Awakening. I still like the Awakening better, but I enjoyed this little book. I liked the odd motivations of the characters. The subtly-revealed sexual abuse of the main female character drives nearly everything in the plot. Some previous reviewers, especially the one who gave a brief plot overview, seemed to have missed that and dismissed the character as "psycho."

It was a bit slow to get through at times, though. That's probably my biggest complaint. ( )
  jessicamhill | Dec 22, 2009 |
wow, wow, wow! amazing writer. ( )
  mmillet | Dec 14, 2009 |
Some time after I finished the book, it occurred to me that its plot pretty closely mirrors that of Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boi." McEwan may have thought he threw us off the scent by juggling the roles around, but I wasn't fooled. No siree. ( )
  theanalogdivide | Dec 1, 2009 |
Some time after I finished the book, it occurred to me that its plot pretty closely mirrors that of Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boi." McEwan may have thought he threw us off the scent by juggling the roles around, but I wasn't fooled. No siree. ( )
  theanalogdivide | Dec 1, 2009 |
Some time after I finished the book, it occurred to me that its plot pretty closely mirrors that of Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boi." McEwan may have thought he threw us off the scent by juggling the roles around, but I wasn't fooled. No siree. ( )
  theanalogdivide | Dec 1, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 166 (next | show all)
On Chesil Beach is brief and carefully plotted, the writing is measured, the tone of voice is forgiving and nostalgic. In other words, it is a fine example of emotion recollected in tranquillity. Even so, I couldn't help regretting the fun McEwan might have had with these sad fumbling innocents when he was younger, less mellow, and a great deal less forbearing.
added by jburlinson | editNew York Review of Books, Al Alvarez (pay site) (Jul 19, 2007)
 
After two big, ambitious novels — “Atonement” and “Saturday” — Ian McEwan has inexplicably produced a small, sullen, unsatisfying story that possesses none of those earlier books’ emotional wisdom, narrative scope or lovely specificity of detail.
 
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Epigraph
Dedication
To Annalena
First words
They were young, uneducated, and both virgins on this, their wedding night, and they lived in a time when conversation about sexual difficulties was plainly impossible. But it is never easy.
Quotations
This was still the era - it would end later in that famous decade - when to be young was a social encumbrance, a mark of irrelevance, a faintly embarrassing condition for which marriage was the beginning of a cure.
There was no one she could have talked to. Ruth, her sister, was too young, and her mother, perfectly wonderful in her way, was too intellectual, too brittle, an old-fashioned bluestocking. Whenever she confronted an intimate problem, she tended to adopt the public manner of the lecture hall, and use longer and longer words, and make references to books she thought everyone should have read.
Britain, England, was a minor power - saying this gave a certain blasphemous pleasure. Downstairs, of course, they took a different view. Anyone over forty would have fought, or suffered, in the war and known death on an unusual scale, and would not have been able to believe that a drift into irrelevance was the reward for all the sacrifice.
The term dissolved intimacy, it coolly measured his mother by a public standard that everyone could understand.
It pained him tremendously that their wedding night was not simple, when their love was so obvious.
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On Chesil Beach

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0385522401, Hardcover)

Such is Ian McEwan's genius that, despite rambling nature walks and the naming of birds, his subject matter remains hermetically sealed in the hearts of two people.

It is 1962 when Edward and Florence, 23 and 22 respectively, marry and repair to a hotel on the Dorset coast for their honeymoon. They are both virgins, both apprehensive about what's next and in Florence's case, utterly and blindly terrified and repelled by the little she knows. Through a tense dinner in their room, because Florence has decided that the weather is not fine enough to dine on the terrace, they are attended by two local boys acting as waiters. The cameo appearances of the boys and Edward and Florence's parents and siblings serve only to underline the emotional isolation of the two principals. Florence says of herself: "...she lacked some simple mental trick that everyone else had, a mechanism so ordinary that no one ever mentioned it, an immediate sensual connection to people and events, and to her own needs and desires...."

They are on the cusp of a rather ordinary marital undertaking in differing states of readiness, willingness and ardor. McEwan says: "Where he merely suffered conventional first-night nerves, she experienced a visceral dread, a helpless disgust as palpable as seasickness." Edward, having denied himself even the release of self-pleasuring for a week, in order to be tip-top for Florence, is mentally pawing the ground. His sensitivity keeps him from being obvious, but he is getting anxious. Florence, on the other hand, knows that she is not capable of the kind of arousal that will make any of this easy. She has held Edward off for a year, and now the reckoning is upon her.

McEwan is the master of the defining moment, that place and time when, once it has taken place, nothing will ever be the same after it. It does not go well and Florence flees the room. "As she understood it, there were no words to name what had happened, there existed no shared language in which two sane adults could describe such events to each other." Edward eventually follows her and they have a poignant and painful conversation where accusations are made, ugly things are said and roads are taken from which, in the case of these two, the way back cannot be found. Late in Edward's life he realizes: "Love and patience--if only he had them both at once--would surely have seen them both through." This beautifully told sad story could have been conceived and written only by Ian McEwan. --Valerie Ryan

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 11:43:21 -0500)

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