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| The Cement Garden | 
enlarge | Author: Ian Mcewan Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
List Price: £6.99 Buy Used: £0.60 You Save: £6.39 (91%)
New (27) from £2.30
Avg. Customer Rating: 30 reviews Sales Rank: 3951
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.1 x 0.5
ISBN: 0099755114 EAN: 9780099755111 ASIN: 0099755114
Publication Date: June 5, 1997 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: This is an ex library book in good readable condition with the paperback cover protected by a removable plastic sleeve. The contents are clean and unmarked apart from a couple of library stamps on the title page and subsequent page.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 25 more reviews...
Brilliant but Depressing September 5, 2008 Ian McEwan is a wonderfully gifted writer and in this, his first novel, he displays his talent. He tells the story of a group of dysfuntional children surviving after the death of their parents. He certainly gets inside the head of Jack, the 15 year old protagonist, with all his doubts, selfishness and youthful insecurities. The writing is very skillful but it is never inspiring, entertaining or enjoyable. It is depressing, sinister and morbid. Although this book is well written I much preferred his other novels such as Atonement or Saturday.
Ewwww.... yucky. In a good way. March 1, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
One thing you can rely on with Mr McEwan is that you get something different every time. It's hard to believe this book is by the same person who wrote A Child in Time, Black Dogs and - especially - Atonement.
The claustrophobic atmosphere of a filthy house in the middle of an unbearably hot summer is almost tangible throughout this book. Sometimes I could feel the sticky kitchen floor and smell the rotten food in the fridge. And as for our three key players, the children of this revolting home, they are the most unlikeable, weird bunch you could imagine. A little bit Lord of the Flies, a little bit Wasp Factory, this is not a chocolate box image of childhood, but a relentless dig at the underbelly of a very, very dysfunctional family. Like picking at a scab, you can't leave it alone until you know just to what depths these twighlight zone characters will plunge.
The point is well made. When kids grow up without love or affection, like flowers in a concrete garden, their natural inclination to love, family and bonding can get wildly out of kilter.
Not a pleasant read. But a good one.
Not that great February 15, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this book following all the great reviews. As someone who runs a project looking after orphans, some who live alone, I thought it would be an interesting read. However I found the characters & setting unbelievable and difficult to relate to. There was little exploration of the children's feelings about their parents' deaths and it seemed more centred around their sexual awakening. The climax at the end was predictable. I won't be recommending this to my friends!
Disturbing but brilliant September 16, 2007 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
I thought I was going to hate this - as a keen gardener and lover of wildlife, how could I empathise with a father who intended concreting his entire garden? But the father dies and the children are eventually left to fend for themselves. Despite being a darkly disturbing novel it somehow manages to grip the imagination and hold the reader's interest. The central story, in many ways so improbable, becomes plausible in the hands of such skilled writing. Ian McEwan portrays the indolence of youth and the hot summer days so vividly that you can hear the buzz of flies and feel the heat rising off the concrete.
In the end, it is easy to imagine how children in such a disturbingly distressing situation managed to slip through the safety net of the authorities.
Whether or not it is an 'enjoyable' read is a moot point but I would urge anyone who has not done so to read it for the sheer thought-provoking brilliance of the writing.
An even darker "Lord of the Flies" March 12, 2007 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is a dark, disturbing but exhilarating book. It is kind of a turbo-charged Lord of the Flies, except it replaces the youthful adventures of that book with a disturbing twist on the everday and the prosaic. You can tell from the start that there will be no happy ending; as the back garden is covered by a layer of concrete and cement it symbolises an end to a "normal" childhood, and the characters descend into an incestuous "fake-family" with children playing the roles of Mum, Dad and Baby. A well written and compelling read and the shortness of the book means that there is no let up. Brilliant.
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