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Amsterdam

Amsterdam

List Price: $24.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good book
Review: Amsterdam is a good story, well told and very interesting. It will hold your attention and at times fascinate you. I bought and read this book when I was traveling through Europe last summer. As I read it I really did enjoy it, but upon finishing it, I found it too inconvenient to continue carrying it in my backpack to put on my bookshelf at home. I guess that summarizes how I felt about it. A worthwhile read, but probably not one you will feel that you need to keep around to read again and again.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Very, very thin (in many senses of the term)
Review: McEwan is a talented writer, but this work is a decidedly minor effort--and its winning the Booker is an utter puzzlement. It's a very plot-driven piece (though at less than 200 pages, with enormous font size, it is more of a novella than a novel--and not worth the expensive price), but the characters seem very thin indeed. It's hard to care much about a morality tale when the characters are so thoroughly dislikable. With their elite educations, glamorous occupations, clever bitchery, and self-aggrandizing behavior, Clive and Vernon seem to have stepped out of a P. D. James novel--unfortunately, there's no Inspector Dagliesh around to provide any sort of moral compass (or real suspense).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: clever and insightful
Review: Reviewer Jeff Chen said it perfectly. My browser button mistakenly hit the "no" button under his comments. There is a lot of meat in this short, wicked novel. Thank goodness we don't care a fig what happens to the protagonists. They manage to destroy themselves before they are actually killed.McEwan makes us enjoy watching their demise.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: OK
Review: I read it in a few days while commuting to work. It lags at times, and was OK. I didn't understand why this Molly was so loved by men considering everyone knew she hopped in and out of so many beds. Ich! The ending was predictable, but again it was an OK book to pass the time.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Another Booker disappointment
Review: This is certainly not Ian McEwan's finest work, by a long stretch. Compared to his rich, dark, engrossing symphony, Enduring Love, this is a mere bagatelle, an intermezzo. The portrait of the contemporary composer Clive Linley is well drawn, and McEwan does have insight into the creative process which transfers neatly to a composer. The book is very well written, as one would expect from McEwan, but in the end it amounts to little. It is humorous, but the book is not a comedy. It skirts deep issues like euthenasia and the influence of the gutter press without really probing them deeply or thoughtfully. A good, short read, but hardly prize winning material. Enduring Love was much more worthy of the Booker prize.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An enjoyable jeu d'esprit
Review: This book is a black comedy that is very, very dry. The author takes on the British "chattering classes" and has his fun with their overlapping infidelities as well as their social and artistic ambitions. The style combines the humor of P.G. Wodehouse with the plotting of P.D. James. Highly recommended as airplane reading (especially if one is going to Holland...).

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: disappointing because it's so promising
Review: I have to admit that I expected a lot from _Amsterdam_ going into the book. First of all, there was the whole Booker Prize thing. Second of all, good word of mouth. Anyways, it's hard to live up to high expectations and that may have something to do with the harshness of my response.

Amsterdam is beautifully written. McEwan does an amazing job of economically sketching Molly's lovers. For the first half of the book, the book carries you along with the plot-- circling through the world that the dead Molly leaves behind.

It goes *badly* wrong at the end. Or, I should say that the ending doesn't match with the beginning-- I'd bet there are people out there who don't like the start at all, but really like the conclusion. A writer has to earn the right to get from point A to point M in his novel-- McEwan doesn't earn the rather extreme jumps that he made.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Enjoyable reading - no less, but no more
Review: Well written book with an interesting story, centering on the theme of friendship and morale. But what starts off quite impressively turns farcical in the end - and too much so in my opinion. The outcome seems artificial and noticeably contrived. McEwan even starts to explain the ambiguities of English instead of letting them stand for themselves. I am surprised that this won the Booker Prize in 1999.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Greater Expectations
Review: Perhaps it's unfair to expect more from a Booker prize winner but having read "Amsterdam", I'm determined to check out the other finalists if only to decide whether this book is deserving. This is not to deprive Ian McEwan of the accolades bestowed upon him. Indeed, "Amsterdam" is a superbly crafted piece of work, smart and stylishly funny. It's laden with irony and it cleverly explores the dark side of friendship. However, except for the brilliant and sadly comic ending, the characters are quite forgettable. In my book, the mark of exceptional literature is its ability to move me. "Amsterdam" is very good but certainly not exceptional. I am however motivated to discover more of Ian McEwan's works and I hope to be better rewarded.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An intriguing and very well-written novel
Review: I came across this little gem at a used book sale in a hospital waiting room-- surely not the most auspicious of circumstances for encountering literature. Although it won the Booker, this title was obscure to me, and was not something I would ordinarily have sought out. It was a very worthwhile read nonetheless. McEwan writes beautifully, and has an ear and an eye for the telling detail. The novel tells a sadly comic, or comically sad, story about self-delusion, among other things. I was left with the uncomfortable feeling that it is indeed possible to be dead long before you know it.


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