The Magus of Fitzrovia in His Prime

Summary


What stood in their way?' [Ian McEwan] writes. 'Their personalities and their pasts, their ignorance and fear, timidity, squeamishness, lack of entitlement or experience or easy manners, then the tail end of a religious prohibition, their Englishness and class, and history itself. Nothing much at all.' The novelist, who is 58, has the sparkling eyes, gentle manner and easy smile of a compact magus.

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Extract


The Magus of Fitzrovia in His Prime

I meet Ian McEwan for lunch at Elena's L'Etoile near his Fitzrovia home. He is greeted like a member of the family, and he tells me with relish that the restaurant features in The Dean's December by one of his literary heroes, Saul Bellow.

McEwan's last book, Saturday, was explicitly influenced by Bellow, and in many ways a homage to the American master. But his new and eleventh novel, On Chesil Beach (a short masterwork), explores different terrain. Set in 1962, it takes as its narrative focus the weddi...

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