On Chesil Beach: A Novel |
Ian McEwan
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| Edition |
Hardcover |
| List Price
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$22.00
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$14.96
(Save 32%)
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| Published by | Nan A. Talese |
| Release date | 2007-06-05 |
| ISBN | 0385522401 |
| Availability | Usually ships in 24 hours |
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A novel of remarkable depth and poignancy from one of the most acclaimed writers of our time.
It is July 1962. Florence is a talented musician who dreams of a career on the concert stage and of the perfect life she will create with Edward, an earnest young history student at University College of London, who unexpectedly wooed and won her heart. Newly married that morning, both virgins, Edward and Florence arrive at a hotel on the Dorset coast. At dinner in their rooms they struggle to suppress their worries about the wedding night to come. Edward, eager for rapture, frets over Florence?s response to his advances and nurses a private fear of failure, while Florence?s anxieties run deeper: she is overcome by sheer disgust at the idea of physical contact, but dreads disappointing her husband when they finally lie down together in the honeymoon suite.
Ian McEwan has caught with understanding and compassion the innocence of Edward and Florence at a time when marriage was presumed to be the outward sign of maturity and independence. On Chesil Beach is another masterwork from McEwan?a story of lives transformed by a gesture not made or a word not spoken.
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
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Customer Reviews - courtesy of Amazon.com ( Marked4Sale.com is not responsible for review content )
Jeweler's Eye
With meticulous precision, Ian McEwan examines the wedding night of an innocent couple, who marry in 1962 and spend their first night alone together at a hotel on Chesil Beach. In always elegant prose, McEwan displays his great gift for describing the particular and making it universal. In this case, he turns his jeweler's eye on the misunderstandings between a young man and young woman, deeply in love and deeply inhibited. Recommended for anyone who has ever loved or hoped to love.
Anticlimactic
This book would have made a good short story. The plot was too weak
and too drawn out for a full length novel. I was disappointed in this
book.
Don't Let Your Hubris Be Your Hamartia
This book says: Your life can change in one moment. One bad decision, one hour of inflated pride or of deflated self-confidence, and your way may be lost, your course derailed, and you may not be smart enough or brave enough to fix it when you should.
This book is poetic, brief, heart-wrenching. You will read it overnight.
McEwan's seamless movement through time - taking you from Point A (a second-by-millisecond play-by-play of the couples first and foiled attempt at making love) to Point B (a condensed reflection on the monotony of their regular and separate lives, two decades later) - accentuates the way memories of some painful, scary, awkward, unprecedented seconds (spent trying to navigate romance, sex, and love) last a lifetime, while the memories of the years between such episodes (spent naviating the more predictable terrain of career changes, aging, and self-improvement) blur together and dissolve, lose their shape and form, are boiled down into resumes instead of love letters.
This book says: Don't let pride, fear, or practicality ruin your shot at true love. Just. Don't. Do. It.
True to Ian McEwan's form...a beautiful story
I finished this beautiful story in one afternoon. I have read several of Ian McEwan's books and have loved every single one. He has this uncanny knack of drawing you into every agonizing situation, causing you to feel exactly what the character is feeling. Much like Atonement, the last few pages make your stomach turn and a lump gather in your throat. Ian McEwan is writing genius personified, proven again in this wonderful novel.
The Tragedy of Assumptions, Especially in Love
I read this book in one sitting. This book takes place in the early 1960's before the time of free love. The tragedy is that two young people know little of the ways of love and sex. Their attempt to connect on their wedding night is a disaster and haunts them for the rest of their lives, destroying a part of each of them. The young woman, idealizing love but disgusted by the act of it, the bodily fluids, the touching of intimate parts and caresses, rejects her young husband on their honeymoon night. He is appalled, for he thinks that he is loving her, giving her his body and his heart, touching her skin with the intimacy of their love.
She runs away, completely disgusted about 'sex'. He runs after her but their angry words leave both severed from the other. He soothes himself in multiple and unsatisfying relations for the rest of his life. She, being a musician and a composer, composes a piece for him. He never enters a concert hall and the music never reaches the ears to which they were intended.
On Chesil Beach is a rich and tragic story of different expectations, ignorance, and fear. The flip side of fear can be anger since it is safer to express anger than hurt. The hurt that occurs in this book is powerful and lasting. It is both mythical and common happening to many people as they try to connect with others and end up with the wrong expectations and assumptions that lead them apart rather than to an intimacy and love they had hoped for.
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