Between Chapter Fourteen and the news that Marshall and Lola are marrying on p. 285, Marshall almost slips out of view. There are only two glancing references to his Arno bars (on pp. 239 and 304) to remind us of his existence.
"This books provides students with an introduction to the work of Ian McEwan that places his fiction in historical and theoretical context.
Ian McEwan: The Essential Guide to Contemporary Literature ; the Child in Time ; Enduring Love ; Atonement
“The Art of Fiction CLXXIII” [Interview with Ian McEwan], Paris Review (Summer 2002), 31–60. Benjamin, Jessica. The Bonds of Love: Psychoanalysis, Feminism and the Problem of Domination (New York: Pantheon, 1988). Bloechl, Jeffrey.
Moseley, M. (1998), 'Ian McEwan', in M. Moseley (ed.), British Novelists Since 1960, Second Series, The Dictionary of the Literary Biography, Vol. 194. Detroit: Gale. Nicieja, S. (2012), 'Forays into the Scientific Mindset: The Two ...
In this way, Vernon delivers himself completely into the empty essence, into the volatile dependence upon the public of his profession and thus makes himself newly vulnerable to its turnings, but he does not do so without some ...
With a new chapter on Solar, this is an up-to-date guide to critical writing on Ian McEwan, including an interview with the author.