Atonement [electronic resource] : a novel / Ian McEwan.
On the hottest day of the summer of 1935, thirteen-year-old Briony Tallis sees her sister, Cecilia, strip off her clothes and plunge into the fountain in the garden of their country house. Watching her is Robbie Turner, her childhood friend who, like Cecilia, has recently come down from Cambridge. By the end of that day, the lives of all three will have been changed forever. Robbie and Cecilia will have crossed a boundary they had not even imagined at its start, and will have become victims of the younger girl's imagination. Briony will have witnessed mysteries and committed a crime that creates in her a sense of guilt that will color her entire life. Ian McEwan has in each of his novels drawn the reader brilliantly into the intimate lives and situations of his characters. But never before has he written on a canvas so large: taking the reader from a manor house in England in 1935, to the retreat to Dunkirk in 1941, to a London hospital soon after where the maimed, broken, and dying soldiers are shipped from the evacuation, to a reunion of the Tallis clan in 1999. Atonement is Ian McEwan's finest achievement. Brilliant and utterly enthralling in its depiction of childhood, love and war. England and class, it is at its center a profound-and profoundly moving-exploration of shame and forgiveness, of atonement and the difficulty of absolution.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781400075553 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 1400075556 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 9780307371492 (electronic bk.)
- ISBN: 0307371492 (electronic bk.)
- Physical Description: 1 online resource (351 p.)
- Edition: 1st ed. in the U.S.A.
- Publisher: New York : N.A. Talese/Doubleday, 2002, c2001.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Teenage girls > Fiction. Country life > Fiction. Ex-convicts > Fiction. England > Fiction. Sisters > Fiction. Guilt > Fiction. Literary |
Genre: | Psychological fiction. Domestic fiction. Electronic books. Psychological fiction. Domestic fiction. |
Other Formats and Editions
Electronic resources
- BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2003 March
This national bestseller and Booker Prize nominee opens in 1935 in England, where the members of the well-to-do Tallis familytheatrical, 13-year-old Briony; Cecilia, her older, Cambridge-educated sister, and their sensitive, migraine-wracked motherare preparing for the homecoming of son Leon, a successful bank clerk. When Briony observes a flirtation between Cecilia and Cambridge student Robbie Turner, who also happens to be the son of the family's cleaning lady, her writer's imagination gets the best of her, and she later accuses Robbie of a terrible crimea charge that changes his life forever. Shifting perspectives and spanning decades, the novelreminiscent, at times, of the work of Virginia Woolfis a classic portrait of war-torn Europe that examines the writing process, the power of memory and the human capacity to forgive. A reading group guide is available in print and online at www.randomhouse.com/anchor/. Copyright 2003 BookPage Reviews - Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2008 January #1
Ian McEwan's Atonement opens in an upper-middle-class English home on the eve of World War II and revolves around Briony Tallis, a 13-year-old with an active and creative imagination. The novel traces the effects of Briony's rash actions on her sister -Cecilia and Robbie Turner, the son of the family's cleaning lady, and concludes with an epilog in which Briony, now a writer, looks back on her efforts at atonement. The movie, directed by Joe Wright and starring Keira Knightley, is a faithful and loving adaptation that brilliantly evokes the settings and scenes McEwan took such care to bring to life. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.