As  swift as a lethal bullet and as timely as current headlines, McEwan's  Booker Prize-winning novel is a mordantly clever?but ultimately too  clever for its own good?exploration of ethical issues. Two longtime  friends meet at the cremation of the woman they shared, beautiful  restaurant critic and photographer Molly Lane. Clive Linley, a  celebrated composer, and Vernon Halliday, the editor of a financially  troubled London tabloid, could never understand Molly's third  liaison?with conservative Foreign Secretary Julian Garmony, who is  angling to be prime minister, or her marriage to dour but rich publisher  George Lane. Mourning the manner of Molly's agonizing death, which left  her mad and helpless at the end, each man pledges to dispatch the other  by euthanasia should he be similarly afflicted. Immediately afterwards,  both Clive and Vernon are enmeshed in a crisis: Clive must finish his  commissioned Millennium Symphony so it can premiere in Amsterdam, and  Vernon must grapple with the moral issue of publishing photos of Julian  Garmony in drag that George has discovered with Molly's effects. The  clash between whether the demands of pure art are more valid than  political accountability and financial solvency soon assumes a larger  dimension that turns Clive and Vernon into bitter enemies and inspires  each of them to seek revenge by the same means. McEwan spins these plot  developments with smooth alacrity and with acidulous wit, especially  focused on the way shallow and mediocre people can occupy positions of  power and esteem: "In his profession, Vernon was revered as a  nonentity." His ability to sculpt a scene with such arresting visual  detail that it assumes a physical dimension for the reader (most  memorably in the opening of Enduring Love but also evident here as Clive  observes a woman being accosted by a rapist, and as Vernon watches a TV  interview that signals the end of his career) are undiminished. But  when, in the last third of the book, McEwan manipulates the plot to  achieve a less than credible symmetry, it is obvious that, despite the  Booker recognition, this is far from McEwan's best novel. That said,  however, it will undoubtedly hit the bestseller charts, for McEwan, even  when not quite at the top of his form, is a writer of compelling gifts.  Major ad/promo; author tour. 
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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