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McEwan, Ian Atonement ISBN 13 : 9780375712470

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9780375712470: Atonement
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Excerpted from the Introduction. Please note the Introduction contains spoilers. First-time readers are advised to read the introduction after the novel.
I N T R O D U C T I O N
Fiction is, above all others, the art of artifice: it demands the conjuring, from mere marks on paper, of entire felt worlds, of things and of people, of their spoken exchanges and interior emotions and thoughts. Ideally, it is, paradoxically, the deployment of artifice in the service of truth, aiming to reveal as accurately as possible the profound and complex experience of being human and alive on this planet.

But as both writers and readers are aware, stories have their own logic and needs, too: they must sometimes transcend ‘the bleakest realism’, as Briony Tallis calls it in Atonement, in order to fulfill some broader truth. A novelist is always engaged in the complex dance between the real and the ideal, manipulating and re-ordering detail into a comprehensible and hopefully meaningful narrative that may be, as George Eliot called it, ‘the nearest thing to life’, but that is emphatically not life itself.

From the opening pages of Ian McEwan’s masterful 2001 novel, Briony Tallis – just thirteen in the book’s first section, set in 1935 – reflects upon these mysteries. Frustrated with her first play, The Trials of Arabella – of which we are privy to some splendidly mawkish lines – she contemplates returning to her first passion, the story: ‘a story,’ she decides, ‘was a form of telepathy. By means of inking symbols onto a page, she was able to send thoughts and feelings from her mind to her reader’s. It was a magical process, so commonplace that no one stopped to wonder at it.’ She goes further, with a childish presumptuousness that would cause consternation among semioticians: ‘Reading a sentence and understanding it were the same thing; as with the crooking of a finger, nothing lay between them. There was no gap during which the symbols were unraveled . . .’

This faith in the telepathic transparency of language will prove both Briony’s undoing and her power. Atonement stands in contradiction to Auden’s famous assertion that ‘poetry makes nothing happen’: if anything, the conviction of Briony’s storytelling makes too much happen; even as it will prove ultimately incapable of altering reality. At McEwan’s hands, Auden’s line might be rephrased, more accurately, as ‘poetry both does and doesn’t make things happen’.

Certainly, this novel makes its readers feel intensely. McEwan’s literary gifts are lavish, as great as those of any writer alive today, and there is something apparently almost cavalier about his deployment of them. He can create for us a vision of a summer’s evening:


In the early evening, high-altitude clouds in the western sky formed a thin yellow wash which became richer over the hour, and then thickened until a filtered orange glow hung about the giant crests of parkland trees; the leaves became nutty brown, the branches glimpsed among the foliage oily black, and the desiccated grasses took on the colours of the sky.

With equal intensity, he can summon roast potatoes so vivid we can practically taste them:
Cecilia moved round behind Betty to see what everyone else could see – a huge blackened tray recently pulled from the oven bearing a quantity of roast potatoes that still sizzled mildly. There were perhaps a hundred in all, in ragged rows of pale gold down which Betty’s metal spatula dug and scraped and turned. The undersides held a stickier yellow glow, and here and there a gleaming edge was picked out in nacreous brown, and the occasional filigree lacework that blossomed around a ruptured skin. They were, or would be, perfect.
Or again, in a wholly different register, he can bring us to scenes less familiar, and intensely less comfortable, such as the chaos of the British retreat to Dunkirk, early in the Second World War:


After minutes of noisy crunching over glass, there was sudden silence under their boots where the road ended in fine sand. As they rose through a gap in the dunes, they heard the sea and tasted a salty mouthful before they saw it. The taste of holidays . . . But the actual beach . . . was no more than a variation on all that had gone before . . . He saw thousands of men, ten, twenty thousand, perhaps more, spread across the vastness of the beach. In the distance they were like grains of black sand. But there were no boats, apart from one upturned whaler rolling in the distant surf. It was low tide and almost a mile to the water’s edge. There were no boats by the long jetty. He blinked and looked again. That jetty was made of men, a long file of them, six or eight deep, standing up to their knees, their waists, their shoulders, stretching out for five hundred yards through the shallow waters.

This, of course, is the least of the horrors of war that McEwan’s characters – and hence his readers, too – must encounter. To relive these surreal scenes is, in its way, a generalized act of atonement, a bearing witness and a recollection of what, in its details, war actually is. As Robbie Turner, the soldier through whose eyes we experience the retreat, reflects, ‘Who could ever describe this confusion, and come up with the village names and the dates for the history books? And take the reasonable view and begin to assign the blame? No one would ever know what it was like to be here. Without the details there could be no larger picture.’

Of course, ironically, at sixty (now seventy) years’ remove, the Second World War is for most of us reduced precisely to names and dates, to some version of ‘the reasonable view’. It falls to the novelist to bring it fully back to life, to restore, for his readers, the fleeting moment of hope when the soldiers reached the beach, each at the end of his own long and terrifying flight from the battlefield – the soundlessness of the sand, the salt smell of the air, ‘The taste of holidays’ – only to find (as it first appeared) that there was no hope there.
****
Complicatedly, this novel is both itself, and a novel about itself. Like a snake eating its tail, the narrative proves a moebius strip from which there’s no clear escape. We’re reading the lush and glorious prose of Ian McEwan, of course; but we’re also reading the prose of one of his protagonists, Briony Tallis, the young aspiring writer in 1935 who, by the novel’s conclusion in 1999, is revealed to be not only an accomplished novelist now grown old, but more specifically the writer of this book. Her reasons for the writing are intricate and painful, and should be left to the reader to discover. But the revelation of her authorship will prompt many to return to the novel’s opening, to question the seemingly insouciant lyricism of its most richly evocative passages, and to analyse McEwan’s, and Briony Tallis’s, choices at every turn.

For, as Briony Tallis acknowledges, there is grave responsibility in reconstructing a version of what was. The novel she is writing, the novel in our hands, has required meticulous research – including correspondence with soldiers who were at the scene (‘ ‘‘You have your RAF chappie wearing a beret. I really don’t think so. Outside the Tank Corps, even the army didn’t have them in 1940. I think you’d better give the man a forage cap.’’ ’) – and the melding and reconfiguring of actual events (‘I worked in three hospitals in the duration ... and I merged them in my description to concentrate all my experiences in one place’). This is precisely an example of a writer’s falsification in the service of truth. But perhaps, Briony Tallis would contend, perhaps sometimes, the novel can serve another, still greater kind of truth, a type of justice. Perhaps – and there is surely inherent blasphemy in the very suggestion – a novel can provide some form of redemption.
****
Atonement is divided into four sections, beginning in 1935 and ending in 1999. The opening section, by far the novel’s longest, is set in a country house in the south of England, at a time when the prospect of war is bruited but still seems a faint and dreamlike possibility. In these chapters, in which we are granted access not merely to the thoughts but also to the fantasies of the future of many of the central characters, McEwan’s dance between the real and the imaginary is particularly lively.

The story at hand is that of an ultimately disastrous house party in the summer of 1935. The hosts are the Tallis family: Leon, the eldest, home from London; Cecilia, a recent Cambridge graduate; and young Briony, all in the company of their mother, Emily, a largely absent but fond matriarch who is prone to migraines. They are entertaining their cousins – fifteen-year-old Lola, and nine-year-old twins Pierrot and Jackson Quincey – whose parents are in the process of divorcing; along with a friend of Leon’s, Paul Marshall, heir to a vast fortune in the confectionary business. Also present, and centrally important, is Robbie Turner, the son of the Tallises’ cleaning lady, a brilliant young man also recently down from Cambridge who, thanks to the largesse of Jack Tallis, Emily’s husband, is contemplating medical school.

There is much literary nuance in the assembling of this company: the time-honored structure of the country-house gathering affords, like a stage-play, rich possibilities for misapprehension and deceit. Different configurations of characters – diverse in age and social class, as well as temperament – will gather and disperse in various rooms or locales around the property; scenes are witnessed, conversations partially overheard, and significant notes exchanged. Upon occasion, plays are performed – although in this case, Briony’s play is halfheartedly rehearsed, then abandoned. These are deliciously familiar tropes. Think of the oeuvre of Jane Austen, whose Northanger Abbey provides Atonement’s epigraph; or of Brideshead Revisited, and of the novels of Anthony Powell; and again of Jean Renoir’s film The Rules of the Game. Or more recently, of Edward St. Aubyn’s quintet of Patrick Melrose novels, in which house-parties of various kinds underpin much of the social interaction. The signifiers are familiar; but their significance is not fixed.

In this case, McEwan both satisfies our expectations – here, for example, is the grand manor in its cultivated yet rustic setting, surrounded by parkland, follies and fountains and ha-has, bounded by woods – and simultaneously undermines them: the house itself is a fake latecomer, a Victorian horror, a ‘bright orange brick, squat, lead-paned baronial Gothic, to be condemned one day in an article by Pevsner, or one of his team, as a tragedy of wasted chances, and by a younger writer of the modern school as ‘‘charmless to a fault’’ ’, erected on the site of an ‘Adam-style house . . . destroyed by fire in the late 1880s’.

Like their house, the Tallises, in spite of their apparent grandeur, are false, a mere generation removed from humble origins: ‘Cecilia’s grandfather . . . grew up over an ironmonger’s shop and made the family fortune with a series of patents on padlocks, bolts, latches and hasps.’ The family isn’t so far, it transpires, from their father’s protégé, the aspirant, industrious and brainy Robbie Turner, who, in this particular moment of possibility, is caught halfway in his move up the social ranks: his mother polishes the silver at the big house, it’s true; but he will attend the dinner party as a guest. There is something narratively perfect – almost purely novelistic – about Robbie: his are the perfect characteristics for a novel’s hero.

Then, too, there are the Quincey cousins: although they, like the Tallises, are blessed with an august and profoundly English-sounding surname – the one evoking the great essayist; the other the still greater composer – the children have been given theatrical, almost (and in one case, actually) clownish first names – Lola, Pierrot, and Jackson – as if, one might say, they were fictional characters. Their names call us, as readers, to interpretation – which is, of course, what fictional characters do.

If the slightly heightened contrasts of the Tallis household do not alert us to the complexities of their story-ness, young Briony’s ruminations will: McEwan captures brilliantly the combination of earnestness, grandiosity and fecklessness of a half-formed mind in pursuit of its artistic greatness. The novel’s first section tells of the crisis that will shape the Tallis family henceforth; but it also tells of the crisis of literary faith that will turn Briony into a novelist. Abandoning childish topics – ‘for her now it could no longer be fairy-tale castles and princesses’ – Briony comes to see her literary task as almost God-like:


She could write the scene three times over, from three points of view . . . None of these three was bad, nor were they particularly good. She need not judge. There did not have to be a moral. She need only show separate minds, as alive as her own, struggling with the idea that other minds were equally alive. It wasn’t only wickedness and scheming that made people unhappy, it was confusion and misunderstanding; above all. it was the failure to grasp the simple truth that other people are as real as you. And only in a story could you enter these different minds and show how they had an equal value. That was the only moral a story need have.

From this, we might infer that McEwan’s aim is simply to replicate Briony’s mission, to make us equally aware of the workings of various characters in the Tallis family circle. And indeed, this mission – Chekhovian, in its essence: it was Chekhov who famously wrote, of horse thieves, ‘Let the jury judge them; it’s my job simply to show what sort of people they are’ – would be largely sufficient for a work of art. But through the careful structuring of the remainder of the novel, we come to realize that McEwan has more at stake.
****

The second and third sections of the novel take place in the summer of 1940. These sections, like the novel’s first, are written in a close third person, enabling us to slip seamlessly from external observation to internal monologue and back again. In the first instance, we accompany Robbie Turner, now a private in the army, on his retreat through northern France to the beach at Dunkirk, where the British troops have massed in the hopes of a rescue by sea. These are a brutal, intensely vivid, eighty pages, in which we are spared nothing of the surreal sights and horrors of war, nor its black comedy. At one point, Robbie tries to save a woman and her child, only to see the spot where they were standing vaporized, and a smoking crater in their stead. At another, Robbie and his mate Nettle are forced to chase a wayward sow through the streets of a town for an old woman, in return for which they receive some food. How could these events be part of the same story? The implausible disjunctions aren’t lost on Robbie:


Periodically, something slipped. Some everyday principle of continuity, the humdrum element that told him where he was in his own story, faded from his use, abandoning him to a waking dream in which there were thoughts, but no sense of who was having them.


This section, like the first, has its antecedents. While it echoes a very different genre – the war narrative is a far cry from the house-party romp – Robbie’s account is similarly engaged both with an actual (potential) reality and with a body of fiction. The difference is, of course, that most war narratives – from Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front to Joseph Heller’s Catch 22 to Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried – are written by writers who have wit...
Amazon.fr :
Atonement is Ian McEwan's ninth novel and his first since the Booker Prize-winning Amsterdam in 1998. But whereas Amsterdam was a slim, sleek piece, Atonement is a more sturdy, ambitious work, allowing McEwan more room to play, think and experiment. We meet 13-year-old Briony Tallis in the summer of 1935, as she attempts to stage a production of her new drama The Trials of Arabella to welcome home her elder, idolised brother Leon. But she soon discovers that her cousins, the glamorous Lola and the twin boys Jackson and Pierrot, aren't up to the task, and directorial ambitions are abandoned as more interesting preoccupations come onto the scene. The charlady's son Robbie Turner appears to be forcing Briony's sister Cecilia to strip in the Fountain and sends her obscene letters; Leon has brought home a dim chocolate magnate keen for a war to promote his new "Army Amo" bar; and upstairs Briony's migraine-stricken mother Emily keeps tabs on the house from her bed. Soon, secrets emerge that change the lives of everyone present... The interwar upper-middle-class setting of the book's long, masterfully sustained opening section might recall Virginia Woolf or Henry Green, but as we move forward--eventually to the turn of the 21st century--the novel's central concerns emerge, and McEwan's voice becomes clear, even personal. For at heart, Atonement is about the pleasures, pains and dangers of writing, and perhaps even more, about the challenge of controlling what readers make of your writing. McEwan shouldn't have any doubts about readers of Atonement: this is a thoughtful, provocative and at times moving book that will have readers applauding.--Alan Stewart

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  • ÉditeurEveryman's Library
  • Date d'édition2014
  • ISBN 10 037571247X
  • ISBN 13 9780375712470
  • ReliureRelié
  • Nombre de pages424
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Description du livre Hardcover. Etat : new. Hardcover. Brilliant and utterly enthralling in its depiction of childhood, love and war, England and class, this beautiful hardcover edition of the bestselling "tour de force" (The New York Times) is a profoundand profoundly movingexploration of shame and forgiveness and the difficulty of absolution.On the hottest day of the summer of 1935, thirteen-year-old Briony Tallis sees her older sister Cecilia strip off her clothes and plunge into the fountain in the garden of their country house. Watching Cecilia is their housekeepers son Robbie Turner, a childhood friend who, along with Brionys sister, has recently graduated from Cambridge. By the end of that day the lives of all three will have been changed forever. Robbie and Cecilia will have crossed a boundary they had never before dared to approach and will have become victims of the younger girls scheming imagination. And Briony will have committed a dreadful crime, the guilt for which will color her entire life. In each of his novels Ian McEwan has brilliantly drawn his reader into the intimate lives and situations of his characters. But never before has he worked with so large a canvas: In Atonement he takes the reader from a manor house in England in 1935 to the retreat from Dunkirk in 1941; from the Londons World War II military hospitals to a reunion of the Tallis clan in 1999.Dont miss Ian McEwans new novel, Lessons. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9780375712470

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