Saturday by Ian McEwan
–Saturday by Ian McEwan–
My rating: **** and 1/2
Of late I have found myself ebbing away from critiquing books and movies. Blame that on the academia hell that medicine is. But off and on, comes a book so breathtakingly fresh–it gives this whole new lease of life to my hobby of reading. Ian McEwan and his latest book, Saturday is precisely that.
Spanning just a single day (yup, its the Saturday that gives the book its name), the novel sees Henry Perowne, a neurosurgeon waking up in the middle of a Feb 2003 night and drifting about near his window overlooking a posh central London street. A comet flashes him by just that very instant but as he’s about to wake up his asleep wife, he hears the loud rumble of the aircraft. What he thought was a comet is in fact a plane coming down in flames. As it happens in such moments, he starts off on a thinking frenzy… contemplating whether he should sign in at his hospital (negates that as the plane’s going towards Heathrow direction–far removed from his own borough), fixates himself on the plane, its state of passengers… with one thought leading to another, Perowne starts introspecting bigtime. On everything. His wife Rosalind, his two kids–the blues rocker Theo and the poet daughter, Daisy; his job, his friends, sick mother, father-in-law, life, present political state of affairs–the impending Iraq war. But of course, all this doesn’t stop the actual Saturday to dawn. And with this new day comes a host of incidents–Perowne shopping for his family reunion, his visit to Lily, his mentally demented mother and on his way to a Saturday squash match, his brush with a ruffian called Baxter. Later that day, the re-intrusion of Baxter in his life brings probably his worst fears alive.
Saturday boasts of probably the most liveliest of first person monologues I have had the chance to read in contemporary literature besides Zoe Heller’s Notes on a Scandal and Neil Cross’s Always the Sun. The characterisation is par excellence. With only one character–Henry–allowed to lay open his psyche in 300 pages, this is one amazing and thoroughly entertaining character study. Right from his constant blabbering to himself and his analysis on almost everything his eyes fall on to his introspection on family, age, politics, literature, children, God, fate–I saw eye to eye on almost every sentence of him. Every word rung a knowing bell, so its no understatement that for me even the tiniest of movements that Henry made, made me hold my breath. I could almost feel his fears, vulnerabilities, triumphs… seldom have I found a connection so astutely made by an author with his reader.
The setting couldn’t get more contemporary and topical than it is–watching Henry reacting to the whole plane incident and the media coverage of the incident the following day is a telling account of how deeply politics and national concern have permeated our everyday lives. Though I do doubt if the general people found the neurosurgical procedures almost as much a delight as I did, it was indeed a pleasant surprise to see an author incorporating these in the most unpretentious way (Robin Cook, please read this). But of course the moments one does get illusioned into believing that this is indeed an autobiography of a surgeon is when we find Henry suddenly and randomly introspecting “scientifically”. Then be it people walking down the street described in a fit down to their neurotransmitters or Henry deducing the neurological disorder of a ruffian who’s about to give him a second punch. Numerous tiny touches like these coupled with those in which Henry checks himself from his thoughts, trying to focus in on the present (dunno how many times that’s happened with me) and yet finding it difficult to hold back a dam of thoughts–you almost feel sitting next to Henry. Hearing him speak about life. Which makes it sometimes a bit too shocking and difficult to read (the whole sequence of Baxter’s re-intrusion and the turn of events thereafter sends chills down the spine–its that real). But since the book culminates at a feel-good, safe juncture (again, entirely plausible in context of the main character), it does make one think about the importance of a family–our natural confidantes, in events of tragedy and humiliation.
I guess just for evoking such a deep interest and empathy from his reader in a seemingly anonymous life of a human being in a remote corner of a metropolis and how his life, his opinions, his expectations from others get their shape from experiences big and small, pleasant and unpleasant, McEwan deserves a pat on the back. It might seem a banal and futile exercise in fiction as I clinically dissect it here, but trust McEwan to rope all that self-analysis, all those perceptions of a single human in the classiest, richest, most enjoyable and possibly the most quotable prose ever. Its like amidst all those larger-than-life thrillers, convenient A to B adventure fiction and hyper-intellectual magic realism and fantasy fiction is this beautiful book that chronicles a life of one of us.
There’s something McEwan does fundamentally right in this book and that is, he writes about a layman, breathes life into him and takes us on a roller-coaster ride with him as he experiences the weakest and strongest moments in a single day, a Saturday. I am touched by how thoughtful and ultimately humane it is.
PS: Can’t wait to read McEwan’s other works. If critics are to be believed, this isn’t even his best. God, what is this guy!
About this entry
You’re currently reading “Saturday by Ian McEwan,” an entry on Karan’s reviews and ramblings
- Published:
- January 15, 2006 / 11:41 am
- Category:
- Booker Nominee, Books, Popular Fiction
- Tags:

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