"What were these authors of reputation doing -grown men and women of the twentieth century- granting supernatural powers to their characters? He never made it all the way through a single one of those irksome confections. And written for adults, not children. In more than one, heroes and heroines were born with or sprouted wings. Others were granted a magical sense of smell, or tumbled unharmed out of high flying aircraft. One poor fellow spotted through a pub window his parents as they had been some weeks after his conception, discussing the possibility of aborting him."What's the big inside joke? Well, that last sentance is a reproof of the crucial scene in McEwan's own The Child in Time, which was published in 1987.
Thursday, May 05, 2005
Inside joke of the day
Saturday is Ian McEwan's brilliant new book (Buy it. Buy it now.) about a day-in-the-life of Henry Perowne, a skillful and flourishing neurosurgeon living in the very center of London. Like so many of you, Henry is smart, solid and thoughtful, and he also has something of a revulsion for modern literature. Here is how McEwan describes it: