Book Club: Ian McEwan's 'Saturday' July 10
July 05, 2017

Join the Webster University Book Club on Monday, July 10, at noon in the Library Conference Room for a discussion of Ian McEwan’s novel, Saturday. Everyone is welcome!
The Publisher’s Weekly review is glowing:
In the predawn sky on a Saturday morning, London neurosurgeon Henry Perowne sees a
plane with a wing afire streaking toward Heathrow. His first thought is terrorism--especially
since this is the day of a public demonstration against the pending Iraq war. Eventually,
danger to Perowne and his family will come from another source, but the plane, like
the balloon in the first scene of Enduring Love, turns out to be a harbinger of a
world forever changed. Meanwhile, the reader follows Perowne through his day, mainly
via an interior monologue. His cerebral peregrination records, in turn, the meticulous
details of brain surgery, a car accident followed by a confrontation with a hoodlum,
a far-from-routine squash game, a visit to Perowne's mother in a nursing home and
a family reunion. It is during the latter event, at the end of the day, that the ominous
pall that has hovered over the narrative explodes into violence, and Perowne's sense
that the world has become "a commuity of anxiety" plays out in suspense, delusion,
heroism and reconciliation. The tension throughout the novel between science (Perowne's
surgery) and art (his daughter is a poet; his son a musician) culminates in a synthesis
of the two, and a grave, hopeful, meaningful, transcendent ending. If this novel is
not as complex a work as McEwan's bestselling Atonement, it is nonetheless a wise
and poignant portrait of the way we live now. (Mar. 22).
And Kirkus Review calls it “a sort of middle-class humanist manifesto: when you find
yourself fortunate beyond all measure in a random universe, gratitude, generosity,
and compassion are a decent response.”