The Anglican service today was more familiar to me from movies. Like one of the great Shakespeare speeches, the graveside oration, studded in fragments in the memory, was a succession of brilliant phrases, book titles, dying cadences that breathed life, pure alertness, along the spine.

Ian McEwan

Tags: literature quotes



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I’ll wait for you. Come back.
The words were not meaningless, but they didn’t touch him now.
It was clear enough - one person waiting for another was like an arithmetical sum, and just as empty of emotion.
Waiting.
Simply one person doing nothing, over time, while another approached. Waiting was a heavy word.

Ian McEwan

Tags: atonement



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Now time, afternoon time, which in the Midi is as elemental as air and light, expanded and rolled billowingly outwards across the rest of the day, and upwards to the vaults of the cobalt sky, freeing everyone in its delicious sprawl from their obligations.

Ian McEwan

Tags: france ian-mcewan



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Bernard was to remember this moment for the rest of his life. As they drank from their water bottles he was struck by the recently concluded war not as a historical, geopolitical fact but as a multiplicity, a near-infinity of private sorrows, as a boundless grief minutely subdivided without diminishment among individuals who covered the continent like dust, like spores whose separate identities would remain unknown, and whose totality showed more sadness than anyone could ever begin to comprehend; a weight borne in silence by hundreds of thousands, millions, like the woman in black for a husband and two brothers, each grief a particular, intricate, keening love story that might have been otherwise. It seemed as though he had never thought about the war before, not about its cost. He had been so busy with the details of his work, of doing it well, and his widest view had been of war aims, of winning, of statistical deaths, statistical destruction, and of post-war reconstruction. For the first time he sensed the scale of the catastrophe in terms of feeling; all those unique and solitary deaths, all that consequent sorrow, unique and solitary too, which had no place in conferences, headlines, history, and which had quietly retired to houses, kitchens, unshared beds, and anguished memories. This came upon Bernard by a pine tree in the Languedoc in 1946 not as an observation he could share with June but as a deep apprehension, a recognition of a truth that dismayed him into silence and, later, a question: what possible good could come of a Europe covered in this dust, these spores, when forgetting would be inhuman and dangerous, and remembering a constant torture?

Ian McEwan

Tags: history world-war-ii ian-mcewan



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I'm holding back, delaying the information. I'm lingering in the prior moment because it was a time when other outcomes were still possible.

Ian McEwan

Tags: inspirational-quotes



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It marked the beginning and, of course, an end. At that moment a chapter, no, a whole stage of my closed. Had I known, and had there been a spare second or two, I might have allowed myself a little nostalgia.

Ian McEwan

Tags: nostalgia



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I'm sorry to disappoint you, but my experience belongs to me, not the collective bloody unconscious.

Ian McEwan

Tags: experience society individual collective-unconscious



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Nothing as singular or as important had happened since the day of his birth. She returned his gaze, struck by the sense of her own transformation, and overwhelmed by the beauty in a face which a lifetime's habit had taught her to ignore. She whispered his name with the deliberation of a child trying out the distinct sounds. When he replied with her name, it sounded like a new word - the syllables remained the same, the meaning was different. Finally he spoke the three simple words that no amount of bad art or bad faith can ever quite cheapen. She repeated them, with exactly the same emphasis on the second word, as if she had been the one to say them first. He had no religious belief, but it was impossible not to think of an invisible presence or witness in the room, and that these words spoken aloud were like signatures on an unseen contract

Ian McEwan


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Un racconto era diretto e semplice, non ammetteva alcuna intrusione tra lei e il lettore - nessun intermediario con le proprie personali ambizioni e incompetenze, nessuna urgenza di tempo, nessun limite alle risorse disponibili. In un racconto bastava desiderare, e poi mettere per iscritto il desiderio, e potevi crearti un mondo; in un dramma invece ti toccava fare con quello che avevi a disposizione: niente cavalli, niente strade di un villaggio, niente mare. Niente sipario. Sembrava talmente ovvio, adeso che era troppo tardi: il racconto era una sorta di telepatia. Attraverso la trascrizione di segni sulla pagina, lei era in grado di trasferire pensieri e sentimenti dalla sua mente a quella del lettore. Era un processo magico, tanto comune che nessuno si soffermava a rifletterci. Leggere una frase coincideva con il comprenderla; come nel caso del gesto di piegare un dito, tra il prima e il dopo non c'era nulla. Non esisteva intervallo che precedesse la comprensione dei segni. Vedevi la parola castello ed eccolo là, in lontananza, circondato da frondosi boschi estivi, immerso nell'aria dolce e azzurrina tagliata dal filo di fumo che sale dalla bottega del fabbro, con una strada di ciottoli che sparisce serpeggiando nell'ombra verde.

Ian McEwan


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My needs were simple I didn't bother much with themes or felicitous phrases and skipped fine descriptions of weather, landscapes and interiors. I wanted characters I could believe in, and I wanted to be made curious about what was to happen to them. Generally, I preferred people to be falling in and out of love, but I didn't mind so much if they tried their hand at something else. It was vulgar to want it, but I liked someone to say 'Marry me' by the end.

Ian McEwan

Tags: books



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