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Child in Time [Hardcover]

McEwan
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)

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Hardcover, 1 Jan 1990 --  
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Product details

  • Hardcover
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0517029367
  • ISBN-13: 978-0517029367
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)

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Ian McEwan
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

The Child in Time opens with a harrowing event. Stephen Lewis, a successful author of children's books, takes his 3-year-old daughter on a routine Saturday morning trip to the supermarket. While waiting in line, his attention is distracted and his daughter is kidnapped. Just like that. From there, Lewis spirals into bereavement that has effects on his relationship with his wife, his psyche and time itself: "It was a wonder there could be so much movement, so much purpose, all the time. He himself had none." This beautifully haunting book won a 1987 Whitbread Prize. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Observer

'Spooky - wonderful' --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
29 of 30 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Like the previous reviewer I feel compelled to counter some of the criticism levelled at 'The Child In Time', a novel I believe to be one of Ian McEwan's finest.

The novel follows a narrative trajectory that is common to many of McEwan's works: one significant - and in this case highly tragic - event leads to a period of disintegration and an exploration of themes.

In 'The Child In Time' a virtuosity of interwoven storylines all centre on the protagonist Stephen Lewis, and offer a deep exploration of the nature of the personal and the private. These two worlds are juxtaposed brilliantly, and with great subtlety. Stephen is presented as father, children's author, member of a government committee on childcare and friend. As in 'Saturday' there are lengthy passages involved with the minutaie of professional life - in this case Whitehall - but perhaps some of the political machinations become more relevant to the reader when viewed as embodiments of the Government stance on childcare, and the more self-centred ideology of the time. It is wrong to criticise the book on account of these sections seeming 'dull' or 'irrelevant' as has been the case below, as they are all part of the common theme of the novel; whether political life is relevant to the reader or not should not matter when it is the nature of time and childhood that is in fact being discussed. This is relevant to us all.

Further weight is given to McEwan's premise in the contrast of the rural and the urban; the rural embodying the return to the private self, the public world of city life presented as a complacent treadmill of government reports, noise and people.

Whereas a novel like 'Enduring Love' cannot live up to its infamous opening passage, 'The Child In Time' has a sense of balance that is hard to find in many modern novels. Whilst certainly not a traditional closure, the unity and proportion of the novel is nigh-on perfect. Whilst it may be a novel of Ideas, and for the most part follows the protagonist's masculine emotional bluntness, it is also by the end profoundly moving. A spine-tingling climax to a genuinely brilliant novel.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
The finest book by Ian Mcewan I have ever read. The attention to detail on every page gives this novel an extra dimension, and Mcewan has dedicated so much thought to this book that it makes your mind spin. Parts of this are liable to change your life, you will find yourself drawn into Stephen's life and as a consequence you suffer as much as he does. Brilliant and utterly absorbing.
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38 of 42 people found the following review helpful
By Erika
Format:Paperback
'The Child In Time' was my first exposure to McEwan, and despite some reservations, led me to reading the rest of his novels and short stories. The child of the title is not one individual but many, and it is the parallels between childhood and adulthood, sanity and madness, portrayed through a number of 'childhoods', both literal and figurative which makes the book work on a number of levels. The main plot concerns Steven's attempts to find his lost daughter, to accept his loss and to salvage his crumbling marriage. Along the way he is drawn back into his own childhood in a sequence of incidents, often therapeutic, at times unhealthy and downright disturbing, where he is forced into examining both his relationship with his parents, and himself as an individual and as a parent. Throughout the process there is the cautionary figure of Charles Darke, a man denied childhood and regressing in his middle age, and the forays of both into politics, with its own bizarre parent-child structures.

The book manages to depict all of this, with realistic, fully formed and yet novel characters, whilst also commenting on British life as it was and as it could have been in a matter of years. As well as the ridiculous workings of politics and spin, the effects of television and the press are shown and the world of publishing is represented by Darke. In this way, McEwan evokes a whole credible environment that supports his points.

My main criticism of the novel is McEwan's tendency towards the sentimental, and in particular his conventional and less than realistic views of men (as active) and women (passive), which undermines the richness and scope of humanity that is such an asset in this tale. I would say this is something evident in his novels as a whole.

There are other novels which treat the theme of lost children ('Ghost Children' by Sue Townsend is a recent attempt) but fail to pack as much meaning into their pages or draw as many conclusions as McEwan does in this enjoyable, original and stimulating book.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Simple premise with a complex message
The story has a simple premise with a complex message. The premise is that a father takes his child shopping and the child is abducted whilst in his care. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Mr. R. P. Bushell
Timely tome
Having read the author's recent output and loved it I thought I would go back in time and read his early offerings. Read more
Published 7 months ago by nickyb
Formed in infancy
Stephen Lawes appears to be pretty well-heeled. His successes seem remarkable. He is a successful writer of children's books. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Philip Spires
the quantom child
WE have all lost the child in time, eg, ourselves, our childhood is over yet lives on...McEwan gives this platitude a neat spin by dramatising it as abduction and by threading a... Read more
Published on 17 May 2010 by Mr. P. O'hara
A Curious mish-mash
This is a curious mish-mash of a book, quite unlike Mr.McEwan's normal tightly plotted and narrative driven style. Read more
Published on 30 Aug 2009 by Peter Scott
Original, fascinating and slightly dystopian
A fascinating novel, with original themes, written skillfully. 'The Child In Time' has a slightly dystopian feel, set in a UK with a Big Brother-ish government. Read more
Published on 8 Mar 2009 by BookWorm
mcewan at his best
the child in time is a good example of what mcewan is all about. not the place to go for a gripping page turner, but thoroughly absorbing in every stroke of the pen. Read more
Published on 20 Nov 2008 by R. Altman
At times a difficult read, but ultimately a rewarding one
Well, to all those that didn't like this novel, and feel the need to attack it - guess what, it's literature, not everyone's going to like it. Read more
Published on 10 July 2008 by Jack Barnes
Warning when reading these reviews
Please bear in mind that as this novel is or has been used (as so many reviewers mention) as an A Level text, many of the reviews are coloured by having been forced to read it as... Read more
Published on 28 Mar 2008 by Pearl Pugh
Is clever enough?
Ian McEwan is like champagne. In fact not just any champagne, but the most expensive champagne on the menu. Read more
Published on 15 Jan 2007 by Bryony Balmforth
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