Wednesday, October 2, 2019
The Comfort of Strangers by Ian McEwan :: English Literature
Review of The comfort of strangers by Ian McEwan  ==================================================    This is a very interesting book by McEwan as well as being rather  confusing. The name ââ¬Ëthe comfort of strangersââ¬â¢ fits the storyline  perfectly.    This is a very mysterious book in which the two of the main characters  Caroline and Roger are slowly tightening the noose on the necks of the  other two main characters Mary and Colin.    I think the book fits into the mystery genre as far as the writing of  the author goes and I found that some parts of the book reminded me of  ââ¬ËEnduring Loveââ¬â¢. The way that that Colin and Mary blindly get involved  with Roger shows one of many weaknesses in the novel. Rogerââ¬â¢s shady  character and his weird story about how his father was very strict and  how his jealous sisters made him eat chocolate so that he would get  into trouble with his father along with other things should have kept  Mary and Colin away. Stories like this one, which require the reader  to suspend disbelief as the actors venture further and further into  the abyss are extremely hard to pull off, so it's not surprising that  McEwan doesn't quite manage it. An author can get away with making his  characters naive, but at the point where the reader is yelling at them  and calling them idiots for following along with the novel's plot,  that author has lost control of his own narrative. A big complaint  that reviewers have had with this novel or rather this ââ¬Ëshort storyââ¬â¢  is that the author works around taboo issues meaning he may talk about  them for a moment or two and then ignores them. Another problem which  links onto this is that many times the author builds up the story as  something really dramatic is going to happen and then nothing out of  the ordinary happens for example when Mary jumps in the water you  would think that one of them may drown but it turns out to be  something just ordinary. I think this has a negative effect on the  reader as well as the fact that sometimes the reader is left to ââ¬Ëfill  in the gapsââ¬â¢ themselves when we are not given enough detail on the  characters or the storyline. There is no real solution at the end of  the novel. Another problem with the novel is how Mary and Colinââ¬â¢s sex  lives suddenly become great again after meeting Caroline and Roger.  Another similar instance is when Roger punches Colin in the stomach  for NO reason. The setting of the novel, which is Venice, is not  really used well by   
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