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The Comfort of Strangers
 
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The Comfort of Strangers (Paperback)
by Ian McEwan (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars 17 customer reviews (17 customer reviews)
RRP: £6.99
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43 used & new available from £2.32
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Product details

Product Description
Observer
'The evils of power and the power of evil are transmitted with a steely coolness...that has a feline grace'

Guardian
'As always, McEwan manages his own idiom with remarkable grace and inventiveness...'

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Customer Reviews
17 Reviews
5 star: 11%  (2)
4 star: 47%  (8)
3 star: 23%  (4)
2 star: 11%  (2)
1 star: 5%  (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Macabre but brilliant, 15 Jun 2007
By Eleanor Fitzsimons (Dublin, Ireland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
`The Comfort of Strangers', McEwan's second novel was published at a time when this bright new talent was causing controversy and had been christened Ian Mcabre by critics shocked by the brutality of his themes and his fearless exploration of dark, previously taboo subjects such as incest, sadomasochism and child abduction. With its theme of unhealthy homoerotic obsession there are echoes of the later Enduring Love here. The story opens with a coldly voyeuristic intrusion into the lives of Colin and Mary, an English couple holidaying in an unnamed European city (assumed to be Venice) in an attempt to recapture the passion that has drained out of their relationship. When we join them they are distant from each other, not speaking and sleeping in separate beds. This gulf is apparent in the fact that even their dreams are at odds. Wandering the city in a torpor late one night they encounter Robert, a smooth talking, cruel and sinister local who seems to mesmerize them against their better instincts and takes them to a seedy bar nearby. Despite being unsettled by the encounter they are persuaded by Robert to visit his home the next day. Here they meet Caroline, his put-upon Canadian wife and quickly detect that something is seriously amiss. It soon becomes clear that the gap between these couples is not as wide as it initially appears. Without a doubt Colin and Mary are complicit in their own downfall and their desires, though previously unrealised, are as unwholesome as those of Robert and Caroline. One theme explored is the impact of fathers on children. Robert speaks of the admirable brutality of his father and Caroline, who defines herself only in relation to men, explains the subservience of her mother and herself to her diplomat father, a pattern repeated in their own relationship. The book is drenched in sexual menace and met with a mixed response on publication with one critic accusing McEwan of "squandering his extraordinary gifts". In summary, excellent, as is all McEwan's output.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully written and shockingly haunting..., 28 Jan 2006
By shimmytastic (Manchester) - See all my reviews
Being an Ian McEwan fan I couldn't wait to read this. It only took me one sitting and as always was very readable and totally engrossing - causing mounting fear and tension like only McEwan knows how to, with nothing in particular happening but an increasing sensation that something is about to (how does he do that?!). The book is set in Venice which adds to the calm mystique and general atmosphere of the story. The end was shocking - I felt quite sick after reading it. This is definitely one of McEwan's most twisted and chilling reads and I couldn't quite work out whether I had enjoyed it or not. Recommended although definitely not my favourite by the author.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Short, psychological and sinister, 28 Sep 2003
'The Comfort of Strangers' at 100 pages long is an excellent thriller. It starts off subtly with a couple holidaying in Venice but rapidly becomes dark, twisted and chilling. McEwan writes extremely well, capturing the mood and emotions of the characters perfectly and depicting the darker side of human nature. It is an excellent book to get into Ian McEwan with before tackling his more famous works like Enduring love and Atonement. Read in one sitting 'The Comfort of Strangers' will get your adrenalin running and scare you witless. Buy it and read it next time you have two or three hours to kill.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars "Death in Venise"
An English couple (Mary and Colin) spend their holiday in a city that bears some resemblance with Venice, Italy.