Enduring Love

by Ian McEwan
Enduring Love  
published December 29th 1999 by Anchor
binding Paperback
isbn 0385494149   (isbn13: 9780385494144)
pages 262
description Joe Rose has planned a postcard-perfect afternoon in the English countryside to celebrate his lover's return after six weeks in the States. To complet...more
date added
02-01-07



Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of Enduring Love.







discuss this book

There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »

groups with this book

1001  Books You Must Read Before You Die
True North
The Snotty Persons Book Club
Literature & Libations with the Ladies




friend reviews (0)

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.



lists with this book




other reviews (showing 1-20 of 2402)



KiwiKathleen
One of my friends (I don’t remember who at the moment) told me she really likes Ian McEwan because each of his novels is so different. Well, she also meant that she has really enjoyed each of his novels that she has read. After all, you could have an author who writes each novel in a different style and with a quite different theme and manner of working through it, but still dislike his/her novels. This being my first novel by him, I can’t make comment, but next one I read I will be watch...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Kelly
Kelly rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
03/05/08

bookshelves: favorites, fiction, worth-rereading
Read in March, 2008
I didn't think it was possible for me to be this impressed and awed by Ian McEwan again, after Atonement. I thought there's no way that he writes something that absorbing and brilliant again. I thought I'd have to settle for something just okay or repetitive tricks, but I didn't. Ian McEwan's novels tend to revolve around a single event, a single moment, or day. This day will change the character's life and everyone around them. It shows the past and the future spiraling around this one narrativ...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  6 comments

Shannon
bookshelves: 2007, contemporary-fiction, psychological-thriller
Read in September, 2007
I watched the film adaptation of this book a few years ago and really enjoyed it, and I've been meaning to read it for a while now. I have to say, despite the different ending, I wasn't disappointed.

Joe Rose is having a picnic with his de facto wife Clarissa when a cry for help sends him running to assist, with four other men, a man struggling with a hot-air balloon. The man's grandson is inside, and he is battling the wind to keep the balloon from being tugged into the sky and the power lin...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Steven
02/21/08

bookshelves: 1001, mcewan
Read in February, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Martine
bookshelves: british, film, modern-fiction, psychological-drama
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for: people who like psychological thrillers
Ian McEwan is at his best when he writes about obsession, and here he does just that. Enduring Love is the story of Joe Rose, a science journalist who gets involved in a freak ballooning accident in which a man dies. This fact alone is enough to plunge him into shock and feelings of guilt, but if that weren't enough, he also gets to deal with a stalker -- a man he met briefly at the site of the accident and who has since become convinced that they are meant to be together. Before the day ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Kate
Kate rated it: 2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars2 of 5 stars
06/08/07

bookshelves: 1945-2000, commonwealth, fiction, own
Read in June, 2007
I don't know about this book.

On one hand, when all is said and done the narrative feels simply like an intricately-written case study, though occasionally punctuated with inconsistently glorious descriptions, for an odd psychological disorder that even with all of Ian McEwan's brilliance is still only mildly interesting.

On the other hand, it's McEwan's wonderful writing combined with a first-person perspective, which gives us the rare treat of a character reflecting introspectively using...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Janet
07/24/08

bookshelves: given-away-via-bookmooch, read-in-2008
Read in July, 2008
I sped through this book more quickly than expected - not because it's really an easy or light read, but because it was suspenseful enough to keep tugging me along, chapter after chapter, when I had every intention of putting it down after reading just a few more pages.

Ian McEwan has mastered the art of foreshadowing and suspense with this book - he dances around important events with an almost infuriating amount of teasing, to the extent that you're tempted to skip ahead a few pages since...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

yb
yb rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
12/11/07

Read in December, 2007
Well, this was my third attempt at reading McEwan, after Amsterdam and Atonement. Again, McEwan has let me down. The story is remarkably easy to read, and has a number of thrilling developments - as I was finishing it last night, I realized that I had balled my fingers up and had them almost at my throat as I read. That said, I don't feel like anything of substance actually developed. It appeared to me that McEwan parsed together two different things he had read - an article on a ballooning ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Jenny
09/09/07

bookshelves: fiction, mystery, us_1981-1999
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: Writers, lovers of psychological thrillers
This was another book to start out slowly. At least it felt like it did, but then when I looked up I was on page 70. It's a near-perfect story in the literary sense of the word: There's a beginning, middle and end; there's a catalyst, a reaction, a resolution. The catalyst is fantastically imagined; a helium balloon accident that leaves one of the would-be rescuers dead. The reaction seemed very real to me - shock, guilt, shame, and, indeed, love. But then with the addition of a delusional man w...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Anna*13
Read in August, 2007
I know McEwan is supposed to be great and all (and I was told that this is his best book) but this is the second book of his that I've tried to read, and I just can't get into his style. The first chapter was good with its jarring description of the balloon accident, and the subject matter was interesting, but the execution was both dull and frustrating, laden with passages like this one: "I was startled. Someone had come up behind me. [Next paragraph.] It's a funny thing about the human ne...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  1 comments

Mimi
03/19/08

Read in March, 2008
recommended to Mimi by: kat anne remy
i can't believe i finished reading a book, yeehaw.
suggested by our babysitter extraordinaire.
i really enjoyed this book. mostly from the writerly perspective. mcewan is just so comfortable with language. it just seems to swoon out of him. the beginning of the book is much stronger, before the story sort of spirals into absurdity. but i suppose there are those stories in the real world.

the struggle between science and art is embodied in this character, joe. in all aspects of his life, ...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  1 comments

Floyd
11/24/07

bookshelves: 100in365
Read in November, 2007
Had I not seen the film adaptation prior to reading the book...I probably would have given this one four stars. In the film the character of Jed has this creepiness that was somewhat absent in the book and for me the story suffered as a result.

I also found myself getting bored at times as McEwan has a tendancy to go off on these rants on scientific studies that seem to have absolutely nothing to do with the story. I think he could have cut out around 20-30 pages of that content and it would...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Amy
Amy rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
04/11/08

Read in April, 2008
What a wonderful, disturbing change to think of love as something sinister.

I meant to just reach over on my bookpile next to my bed, snatch Enduring Love and read it for an hour or so before I got dressed and walked to school. I wound up hardly moving for the rest of the day and certainly not getting out of my pajamas because I just couldn’t put this down. An example: even the title made me think. I picked it up thinking that the word “enduring” was meant as an adjective to descr...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Amy
Amy rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
04/20/08

Part of me wishes I hadn't seen the film first. I kept having flashes of Daniel Craig, Rhys Ifans, and Samantha Morton acting out new scenes in my head as there are quite a few things that are different in the novel (though I think I added scenes from the film to the plot of the novel as well). Certainly the suspense in due to suffer when you know what's going to happen...

I wasn't a fan of the first person narration, but it did lead me to question the narrator's sanity as his wife surely did...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Mollie
07/19/08

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in May, 2008
I lurve everything McEwan writes because I thoroughly buy into his post-modernist, highly self-conscious style. Some people might flat-out dislike it, and that's totally understandable. In this book, McEwan explores morality, rationalism, and the choices we make on a day-to-day basis. It has one of the most explosive and griping opening scenes in any book I've ever encountered, so from the very beginning you're really hooked. McEwan switches points of view during the novel to give you a sens...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Colleen
Read in January, 1997
I read this one quite a while ago, but the story has remained in my head ever since. A happy couple go for a picnic in a park, only to encounter, and get involved in, a bizarre and tragic hot air balloon accident. the man joins with some other people to come to the rescue. One of the rescuers, however, is lonely and imbalanced and, after looking into the narrator's eyes, becomes deeply obsessed with him and begins stalking him. It's a strange sounding story, and if I read this description I woul...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Cydney
02/25/08

McEwan is great at turning readers' expectations on their heads. At various points in this book (and his others), you begin to feel comfortable and assured of your analysis of what is going on. Then, suddenly, something happens that makes you reinterpret that analysis, and by the end, you are given the full perspective on the events of the book. I gave this book to my roommate after I read it and watched her go through a near-identical mental process to mine as she read it. What is so powerful a...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Tracy O
recommends it for: Most Anyone
Like Atonement this book is about culpability and an individual's responsibility for his or her actions. UNLIKE, Atonement, it's super murky what the narrator is truly responsible for so this book isn't about morals - it's really more just creepy (see my review of The Riders because this book is TOTALLY like that) - because you're linked to the narrator through the narrator/reader relationship, BUT you can't trust the narration. In a way it's more interesting than Atonement where responsibilit...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Elizabeth
Read in December, 2007
This book was addictive - once I started reading, the plot grabbed me and I finished it in two days. The protagonist, Joe Rose, is an ordinary middle-aged Londoner whose life is changed by a chance encounter with a strange man (not unlike Henry Perowne in McEwan's Saturday). I don’t want to say any more about the plot - but trust me, it sucks you in. The title portrays love as something that is both strong and lasting and as something that needs to be gotten through and put up with - an...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Emily
07/03/07

recommends it for: Trevor
Absolutely terrifying chilling story. Trev, this is the book I was trying to think of that I said reminded me of you because I thought you might like it, not that I think you are anything like any of the characters. It's an interesting read. Pretty accessible and entertaining, but with a sharper edge of honesty and trust in relationships.....maybe five stars is a bit strong compared to McEwan's Atonement and even Saturday (although Saturday wasn't my favorite), this novel really hooked into m...more
Like this review?   yes  
  1 comments


« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 120 121



book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.65 (1922 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.73 (255 ratings)
number of reviews: 215






other editions

Enduring Love (Paperback)
Enduring Love (Paperback)