THE LIES OF NOVELISTS.Atonement Ian McEwan Doubleday, $26, 351 pp. English writer Ian McEwan Ian McEwan CBE (born June 21, 1948) is an English novelist. Biography McEwan was born in Aldershot in England and spent much of his childhood in East Asia, Germany and North Africa, where his army officer father was posted. has built his house of fiction in traditional patterns, seemingly avoiding forms of postmodern construction. In his novels, stories, and plays, McEwan has distinguished himself with ease of style, acute rendering of character, and remarkable images. His unnerving un·nerve tr.v. un·nerved, un·nerv·ing, un·nerves 1. To deprive of fortitude, strength, or firmness of purpose. 2. To make nervous or upset. fictional worlds indulge in fatal masochistic mas·och·ism n. 1. The deriving of sexual gratification, or the tendency to derive sexual gratification, from being physically or emotionally abused. 2. tastes: a corpse in concrete in the cellar, a spectral hound baying evil beyond the garden, or the ghost of a lost child calling out for return. His latest novel, Atonement, is no exception. A challenging and brilliant work, it rewards careful attention to the writer's art. Atonement presents itself as realistic fiction, yet begins with an epigraph ep·i·graph n. 1. An inscription, as on a statue or building. 2. A motto or quotation, as at the beginning of a literary composition, setting forth a theme. from Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey warning us that the young heroine is intent on misperception mis·per·ceive tr.v. mis·per·ceived, mis·per·ceiv·ing, mis·per·ceives To perceive incorrectly; misunderstand. mis . Wealthy, thirteen-year-old Briony Tallis is blessed, or perhaps cursed, with a vivid imagination, seeing gothic horrors in apparent commonplaces. The novel takes up the nocturnal crime she commits in the garden of her English country home after the hottest day in the summer of 1935. How a trivial dinner party spikes to crisis is the tease. In her attempts to put on a play she has written, Briony casts an innocent family friend as child rapist. This, McEwan is at pains to elaborate, is initially done without malice; but increasingly and self-consciously, it becomes an enveloping en·vel·op tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops 1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´sh n the construction or making of a restoration. that must be maintained for consistency's sake. McEwan narrates from a variety of perspectives and points in time. The reader is told there is a crime to be committed, and that in the future characters will look back on the occasion as the most significant in their lives. The act, the accusation, and the police procedural all happen off stage. The narrative offers us retrospection and introspection, a looking-back on what Briony has done. Seen in the book's concluding third part as an elderly, successful novelist, Briony has a sense of audience that forces her to consider her reader's expectation--be it novel or statement sworn in evidence to the police. If she is to atone, it will be through her writing. The second of the novel's three parts, meanwhile, offers fictional rebuttal rebuttal n. evidence introduced to counter, disprove or contradict the opposition's evidence or a presumption, or responsive legal argument. of the false accusation, as the victim of Briony's crime goes on to distinguish himself in the British Expeditionary Force's retreat to Dunkirk. As impressive an evocation of World War II as one would wish to read, this section adds a remarkable new dimension to McEwan's range. Atonement repeatedly emphasizes the adolescent protagonist's will to control her life. In McEwan's hands, the intention and the act of the crime come from an imaginative impulse inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble adj. 1. a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit. b. linked with the novelist's art. For Briony this is both a projection of what she wishes to be in the future (as a child when she composes her future self) and an atonement for what she did in the past. What is realistic about the novel is constantly undercut by our sense of a "made" fictional world elaborately constructed by the protagonist/narrator Briony. As a result, we enter McEwan's house of fiction very much on the author's terms. As host, McEwan presents himself as guilty of the crime committed by his character, conflating fact and fiction, pushing us to consider the relationship between artistic imagination and truth of life. The careful structuring of the work calls attention to its artifice and reminds us of two alternate assertions about what art does: Keats's Romantic assurance that artistic beauty is truth and Auden's disclaimer that poetry makes nothing happen. This novel shows how such seemingly contradictory statements can both be true at once. Atonement is a most impressive book, one that may indeed be McEwan's finest achievement. Edward T. Wheeler is dean of the faculty at the Williams School in New London, Connecticut New London is a city and a port of entry on the northeast coast of the United States. It is located at the mouth of the Thames River in southeastern Connecticut. New London was founded in 1646. . |
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