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Atonement

Atonement

List Price: $34.99
Your Price: $22.04
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Pointless story
Review: I just finished reading this book and if I didn't have to read it for my book club, I never would have read to the end. Very boring, tedious and too much detail. I literally skipped 30-40 pages when Robbie was fighting in the war. I never felt like I got to know the characters. We know Briony commits a terrible crime and it's supposed to change her life. But the author doesn't show us how her life was changed. He jumps from when she's 18 to the age of 77 and we don't know how she lived her life in between. I was a bit angry as I read the story because I felt I was wasting my time. To me, the story was pointless and when I finished, I wondered, who cares?

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: revealing and deceiving....powerful novel about truth
Review: Ian McEwan delivers an interesting look at English life in the 30's. The story begins at the home of a well to do family. A series of events occur that will change the lives of all those involved in unbelievable ways. It is not so much the events , but they way they are viewed and linked together through the eyes and mind of a very young and naive girl and how she handles the situation.
This novel is also a powerful look at life during WWII for the soldiers and the nurses. The hardships and the medical capabilities that were available are excruciatingly clear.
Ian McEwan has created a vivid novel that tells a story that is both revealing and deceiving that pulls you rapidly along to the conclusion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Aren't of these reviewers incredible?
Review: How anyone has the audacity to say of someone of Ian McEwan's stature and brilliance that he is just "aspiring to be called "literary"" is flabergasting to me. Who are these people? When they have 8 to 10 best-selling, thought-provoking, mini-masterpieces under their belts, maybe I'll give them a listen . . .

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Hated it
Review: NINE chapters before the 'incident' actually occurs. I almost threw the book out the window.
The last half was certainly more interesting than the first but I'm not sure it was worth the aggravation of getting there. Don't waste your money on a hardcover.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A chore worth doing
Review: I would rate this 3.5 stars, but cannot. Three is unworthy, but four almost too much - so I err on the side of "can't put it down no matter how boring this paragraph may be". I read this book as it was recommended from lists of other books I've enjoyed. Jeez, what a chore to get started. I thought I had chosen a book beyond my comprehension at first. It was difficult to get the "feel" of the author (this was my first of McEwan's novels). Maybe because I am American??? But after getting through the first 30 pages or so, things got interesting. This is an unusual story of an obscure event, witnessed by a child, whose misinterpretation affects the lives of all involved -- including herself. A great story that spans a lifetime and is told from several different points of view. Be prepared to switch narrators several times. From a young child's perspective, to the horrific times of war, this novel will make you yearn for more answers. You will be left wondering what happened in between. But that can be a good thing -- thus, four stars.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Roshomon of Literature
Review: Have you ever been annoyed how, in literature, characters always seem to intuitively know what is going on in other people's heads? Why can't I be so incisive? The purpose of Atonement is to turn that notion on its ear. In this novel, the characters think they know what's going on, but none of them are right.

The actual plot of the book is incidental: a little girl sees stuff and misunderstands it (or does she?). What's interesting is that Briony (the central character) is a future author whose books will just be about how individuals perceive things differently. Well, this is a book where everyone perceives things differently. Motivations and actions are completely misunderstood. We travel in and out of the different minds in the story to understand how each of them are mistaken.

As for the actual story, it takes place in World War II Europe. There is a memorable description of the British retreat to Dunkirk. It creates a very vivid picture of what England was like up to and during the war.

Nothing expected happens. I groaned when I came to the bit about the note, because I thought I knew how it would pay off. I was wrong. There is kind of a surprise ending, which is all the more strange in a book that denies the basic principals of plot. McEwan's elegant prose makes for a very engrossing read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stick with it... It's well worth the wait.
Review: In all honesty, it took me a long time to progress beyond the first fifty pages of this novel. The more than three hundred that followed, however, I devoured in three days. As with an earlier book by McEwan, THE INNOCENT, pushing past the exposition requires great patience and discipline. Rich with the prose of THE LOVELY BONES, and ripe with the building excitement of CONQUEST OF PARADISE, ATONEMENT unfolds into a beautifully written novel. The story develops at somewhat of a plod, though the richness of the author's prose vividly illustrates scenes in the 1930's with such detailed resonance that the reader is all the more emotionally involved when events take a turn for the worse. From that point forward, the unfolding of this mature and insightful narrative is a privilege to read, and the reader (at least this one) emerges reluctantly from the final page with a desire to begin the book anew - with a better understanding of where the characters err.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Meandering but not lyrical--still a good book
Review: I found the writing style of McEwan to be meandering without being especially lyrical. There were some details that didn't need to be there, or at least not as drawn out as they were. Still, though, this is a good book in terms of looking at how writing and our imaginations affect our real lives. McEwan's description of how young Briony totally misunderstands the adult world around her is masterful, and makes her somewhat sympathetic, despite the terrible thing she has done. The ending is also something of a surprise, which makes the book worth sticking out to the end. I'd really give this 3-1/2 stars if I could, but I can't, so three stars it is. Still worth your time, though.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Pure torture is right!
Review: I agree with the other reviewers who were left wondering why this book has gotten such good reviews. At best it was tedious; at worst simply boring. Silly plot, plodding descriptions of a confusing profusion of characters, none well enough drawn to draw us into their lives--it was difficult, right to the end of the book, to keep them straight. A huge disappointment after all the hype surrounding this novel.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Help for insomniacs
Review: I wish I had read the reviews here on Amazon before I picked it up. Had I seen the various comments toward Woolf I would have run away screaming. For those who enjoy overdescriptive multisyllabic "in the moment" writings, this book will be a joy. Personally I have already lived through (aka had been forced to) reading Woolf -- and I don't have to anymore. Don't get me wrong, it's not that I don't understand all the big words, it's just downright annoying to be distracted by them. When I read I want to become so engrossed in the story that I forget I'm reading. With this book, that doesn't happen for me; I'm instead bored with the colorless characters and incessant descriptions of their surroundings. I will probably donate this to the local book drive where some poor kid will have to read it for school.. at least he won't have to pay full price.


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