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Saturday |  | Author: Ian McEwan Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy Used: £0.01 as of 10/9/2010 12:40 BST details You Save: £7.98 (100%)
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Seller: Mundesley Books Rating: 188 reviews Sales Rank: 4690
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 0099469685 EAN: 9780099469681 ASIN: 0099469685
Publication Date: December 17, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Product Description Perowne makes his way to his weekly squash game through London streets filled with hundreds of thousands of anti-war protestors. A minor car accident brings him into a confrontation with Baxter, a fidgety, aggressive, young man, on the edge of violence. To Perowne's professional eye, there appears to be something profoundly wrong with him.
Amazon.co.uk Review The critical response to Saturday must be making Ian McEwan a very happy man (not that his virtually unassailable position as Britain's leading novelist has been in doubt). While contemporaries (and rivals) Martin Amis and Will Self have had much more hit-or-miss records recently, each new McEwan novel gleans a host of plaudits, and Atonement has been generally hailed as his masterpiece. Saturday may not enjoy quite such acclaim, but it's a remarkably accomplished piece of work, as richly drawn and characterised as anything he has written. McEwan's protagonist is neurosurgeon Henry Perowne, a man comfortably ensconced in an enviable upper middle class existence. His wife is a successful newspaper lawyer, his daughter Daisy a budding poet. But as he wakes one Saturday morning and witnesses a plane accident through his window, he is not yet aware that this is a harbinger of a sustained assault on all that he holds dear. It's a McEwan trademark to begin his novels with a striking or violent rupture of everyday existence, but this opening is a prelude to his most impressively sustained narrative yet. It's the publication day of Henry's daughter's poetry collection, but a chance encounter with a drunken trio emerging from a lap-dancing club ends violently, even as a march against the war in Iraq streams past nearby. And this encounter with the menacing Baxter, main antagonist of the group, is to have fateful consequences. As Saturday progresses, Henry is forced to examine every aspect of his life and beliefs, not least his attitude to the war. Unlike many of his peers, McEwan is not content to reduce the issues of the war to simple opposition, in which Tony Blair is characterised as a war criminal. Henry has treated a victim of Saddam's brutality, and although a comic encounter with the Prime Minister himself is a highlight of the book, both Henry (and his creator) are obliged to consider the complex skein of the conflict from all sides. While there are missteps (the poetic daughter, Daisy, is thinly drawn), McEwan's invigorating and trenchant novel is an unmissable experience. --Barry Forshaw
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 188
Never will you know a character so well in 24 hours... September 2, 2010 J. Morris (London) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Saturday is a day in the life of Henry Perowne, a Fitzrovia Square dwelling neurosurgeon. The book follows an eventful day in his life, describing & detailing every thought he has about his surroundings, family, coworkers and generally his life. When a minor traffic accident brings unwelcome elements into his life, his diurnal evaluations will count for nothing as a series of coincidences threaten his very way of life.
For the first 30 pages I was absolutely captivated by this book, a simple description of Henry waking up in the middle of the night to a state of uncanny alertness and feeling a compulsion to walk to the window, only to see a burning jet making an emergency landing into Heathrow was simply magical.
The rest of the book follows suit well, but doesn't recapture the initial hypnosis. McEwan's writing style makes the hairs stand up on the back of my neck sometimes. The characters are well fleshed out as often trivial events in Henry's life trigger a spiral into introspective asides detailing his past and his feelings towards the components of his existence. As a result you get to understand the inner workings of Henry's mind, what propels, feeds and most importantly, drives him. The book is set in 2003's London, on the day of the anti-Iraq-war protests and the vivid descriptions of his meanderings around Charlotte, Gower & University Street are true to life, a great touch to an already great book if you know the area.
It is after we have gained a very comprehensive grasp of who Henry is that he is thrown into turmoil and you read with baited breath waiting to see whether he will live upto your expectations of the character. Simply electric reading, I struggled to put this book down. If you are new to Ian McEwan this is as good a place to start as any, I am hooked and would recommend this book to anyone!!
Beautifully measured September 18, 2009 Eileen Shaw (Leeds, England) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
The plot is basically Enduring Love with a different background and characters - but that said, it is much better realised than the previous novel, more densely and intelligently written and has a far superior plot trajectory. The characters are more interesting, various and believable, including the putative villain.
Henry Perowne is the protagonist - a neuro-surgeon, immensely gifted and respected. The scenes where he is performing operations are fascinating. Quite early in the book I was taken aback by Perowne's thought that "There has to be more than saving lives." This in the context of having listened to his son's blues band and glimpsed something of the freedom and openness of other, less structured work - work nonetheless that gives instant pleasure rather than a lifetime's satisfaction, which is clearly what he feels in his own working life. McEwan is good at this kind of provoking thought. Who among us would think our work more satisfying than that of a man who routinely saves lives? But to give the character his due, it is also slightly touching and endearing that he should, even for a moment, think so.
The most exciting part of the novel comes with the same sort of shock as the denouement of Enduring Love, but it seemed to me to be more credible. The danger is more keenly felt and the triumph of this loving and (indeed, lovely) family is all the more satisfying. The political background of the day of protest against the Iraq war is a recurring theme in the novel, and the arguments (for the war in the case of Perowne and against in the case of his daughter Daisy) are cogently rehearsed.
Numerous critics of this book have said the ending is not credible. But I don't see why not. Stranger things happen every day. The potential rapist is a human being too.
This is a stunningly prescient and beautifully measured book. I read it in two long sittings and was captivated.
A wonderful allegorical tale June 16, 2009 Reader 1 (UK) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I read this as an allegory on Tony Blair, his Messiah complex when it comes to nasty foreign regimes and his naive view that everyone else in the world shares his values. Told so beautifully, the allegory is illuminating and has a wider impact than the single historical period it relates to.
A Riveting Read July 15, 2008 LindyLouMac (Italy) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Having just been lent a copy of Ian McEwan's more recent novel On Chesil Beach I decided that I should read Saturday first, as the copy my husband read was on our bookshelves. I have previously read and enjoyed, The Cement Garden, Enduring Love, Amsterdam and Atonement. The latter is still my favourite, although I highly recommend Saturday as a thought provoking read.
Saturday as the title suggests covers just one day, February 15th 2003 in the life of modern day Londoner Henry Perowne. A successful neurosurgeon living a comfortable middle class existence, happily married to Rosalind, a lawyer and two grown-up children Daisy a poet and Theo a musician. His day starts as he watches the dawn from his bedroom window and events as the day progresses cause him to examine his life and beliefs in detail. In fact detail to the extreme is something this story is full of along with lots of literary and musical references. The detail McEwan goes into on subjects as diverse as brain surgery and a squash match are riveting. The brain surgery details made me feel uncomfortable, as for the squash match I felt I was playing the game myself. He writes in such a realistic manner, the fifties housewives cleanliness and the old peoples homes descriptions were also parts where I actually felt I was there, memories of my own may be?
The story builds slowly to its dramatic climax with Henry spending his Saturday preparing for a family gathering. On the day the streets of London were filled with hundreds of thousands of anti-war protestors, which seemed to have a disconnected effect on everything that happened to Henry that day
I enjoyed this so much that I am going to start On Chesil Beach straight away!
Another brilliant novel from a genius July 10, 2006 B. Stott (London, UK) 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
I couldn't believe it when I saw so many 1 and 2 star ratings. I thought this book was one of the best novels I have read in a long time. His prose takes my breath away, his characters are so rich and fully drawn that I feel like I know them. The detail that McEwan goes into is an essential part of the book and I found it immensely enjoyable to read. His brain surgeon protagonist is a man I would love to meet. I will be reading this one again very soon. Genius!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 188
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