Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion

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I really enjoyed Saturday. I didn't find the end illogical, as I've heard others complain of, but pointless & actually (surprisingly) too predictable. Terrorism brought home. Alternative happy endings to world crises. I wish he'd stayed subtle-he does have a flair for the melodramatic.
I've heard good things (but haven't yet read) about Enduring Love. Can anyone tell me a little about it? Just a little story or characters & style.
Thanks out there :)


Your so right-reading takes us on endless & endlessly interesting- journeys.





1) ENDURING LOVE - because of the balloon scene
2) ATONEMENT - because of the library scene
3) THE CHILD IN TIME - so far it is the saddest
4) THE CEMENT GARDEN - because it's dark (incest)
5) AMSTERDAM - my least liked so far.
I am a McEwan fan and I intend to read all his works before I die. Even those not included in the 1001 list. :)



For me, Chesil Beach is the only McEwan novel that has ended as strongly as it began. I find him very inconsistent. Enduring Love, Atonement, Amsterdam: all started out well and then tailed off for me.

I think On Chesil Beach is an exquisite novel(la) and, as Arukiyomi said, it ends as strongly as it starts. Knowing the area possibly helps (which is true for me for several of his books) but I also liked the echoes with several other books I'd read in recent years: Margaret Drabble’s The Millstone, Lynne Reid Banks' The L Shaped Room and Julian Barnes' Staring at the Sun (all referenced in my review http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...).
Books mentioned in this topic
Saturday (other topics)Atonement (other topics)
The Cement Garden (other topics)
Atonement (other topics)
The Child in Time (other topics)
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I liked Enduring Love the most.
Judith, Emlyn is definitely using the 2006 version of the list. In the 2010 version, McEwan has only 3: Atonement, Enduring Love and The Cement Garden.