On Chesil Beach (Random House Large Print

Hardcover, 283 pages

English language

Published June 5, 2007 by Random House Large Print.

ISBN:
978-0-7393-2726-5
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
85855148

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (5 reviews)

A novel of remarkable depth and poignancy from one of the most acclaimed writers of our time.It is July 1962. Florence is a talented musician who dreams of a career on the concert stage and of the perfect life she will create with Edward, an earnest young history student at University College of London, who unexpectedly wooed and won her heart. Newly married that morning, both virgins, Edward and Florence arrive at a hotel on the Dorset coast. At dinner in their rooms they struggle to suppress their worries about the wedding night to come. Edward, eager for rapture, frets over Florence's response to his advances and nurses a private fear of failure, while Florence's anxieties run deeper: she is overcome by sheer disgust at the idea of physical contact, but dreads disappointing her husband when they finally lie down together in the honeymoon suite.Ian McEwan has caught with understanding …

26 editions

Review of 'ON CHESIL BEACH.' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Much more satisfying than the mostly boring and often frustrating Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes, On Chesil Beach has many of the same concerns with memory and troubled sexual relations. It's a slim novel, more a novella really, and there are some major questions left in the reader's mind, but McEwan does characters beautifully, showing the salvationary but ultimately misguided inner thoughts and feelings that prompt the kind of self-defeating words and actions familiar to us all.

Review of 'ON CHESIL BEACH.' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This short novel has at its core a calamitous wedding night between an inexperienced pair of characters in the early 1960s, the circumstances that led to this moment, and an epilogue describing the repercussions it left for one of the characters. Most of the focus is on the inner thoughts of the characters, making their feeble attempts to communicate with one another seem all the more pathetic. I pitied them in a way for how poorly they had been equipped for the task at hand, and I felt that McEwan told their story in a way calculated to make it difficult to assign all the blame to any one individual.

avatar for alembic

rated it

4 stars
avatar for ionut

rated it

3 stars
avatar for swann

rated it

4 stars

Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Fiction - General
  • Literary
  • Fiction / Literary
  • College students
  • England
  • Large type books
  • London
  • Women musicians