Ian McEwan: Machines Like Me
Ian McEwan’s latest novel, Machines Like Me, is an alternative history of the 1980s. There’s a lot to recommend it, but in the end I don’t.
Ian McEwan’s latest novel, Machines Like Me, is an alternative history of the 1980s. There’s a lot to recommend it, but in the end I don’t.
I hope you are all in the middle of a lovely weekend. Here are some bookish thoughts.
Trevor and Betsy look at Alice Munro’s “The Children Stay,” from The Love of a Good Woman.
William Trevor’s “Making Conversation,” from Last Stories, seems like a straightforward, if strange, episode where a woman is confronted by someone who accuses her of having an affair with her husband. She is not, but it’s not that simple. Indeed, the story goes into some dark, painful territory.
Trevor and Betsy look at Alice Munro’s “Save the Reaper,” from The Love of a Good Woman.
The Criterion Collection Announces July 2019 Releases
The 2019 Pulitzer Prize winners have been announced, including our favorites categories: fiction and poetry.
In anticipation of Ian McEwan’s forthcoming Machines Like Me, I look at his 2016 Nutshell, a book with a premise that once put me off but which, it turns out, I loved.