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La llei del menor de Ian McEwan

de Ian McEwan - Género: Drama
libro gratis La llei del menor

Sinopsis

Acostumada a avaluar les vides dels altres en moments de gran complexitat, la Fiona Maye s’adona de sobte que la seva existència no és com voldria: la seva trajectòria com a jutge del Tribunal Superior especialitzada en dret de família ha anat arraconant la idea de formar-ne una de pròpia, i el seu marit, en Jack, a punt de fer seixanta anys, acaba de demanar-li que li permeti viure una primera i última aventura. I just quan en Jack se’n va de casa, incapaç d’obtenir una aprovació impossible, apareix el cas de l’Adam Henry. Que és anormalment madur i encesament sensible, i exhibeix una bellesa que fa joc amb la seva ment, tan esmolada com ingènua; però que està malalt de leucèmia. I que, assumint les conseqüències de la fe dels seus pares, testimonis de Jehovà, ha decidit rebutjar la transfusió que li salvaria la vida. Però l’Adam encara no n’ha fet divuit, i el seu futur depèn de la Fiona.


Reseñas Varias sobre este libro



Do you to people watch?

You know what I mean... just sit somewhere in a busy place and watch people bustle past in all their colourful weirdness. It's a habit I've acquired with age. Sometimes I think back to being a teenager and remember how I always wondered if I was strange in some way - I guess a lot of teens wonder that same question: am I normal? I wonder, had I taken the time to people watch back then, if I would have felt so lost and strange. I don't see how I could have. People are all damn weird creatures and they're really not very good at hiding it.

I'm saying this because The Children Act feels people watching. Some books are easy to sell to other readers because I can promise you dragons and magic, heart-stopping action and romance that will steal your heart straight from your chest. This is not that kind of book. It's not even easy to put into words what this book is about. But it was, for me, nothing short of fascinating.

The main plot follows the life of an aging judge called Fiona whose husband has just announced that he wants to have one last passionate love affair with a younger woman before they can both settle into old age. He seems to believe she will be okay and accept the situation because of his openness and honesty. He is, not surprisingly, wrong.

I guess this book is what people tend to call a "character study" but that sounds so boring, right? something you'd be set for a college assignment, leave until the last minute and rush out in a mediocre essay (possibly while drunk). It isn't. Fiona's tale may be a quiet journey through the inner workings of someone's life, job and marriage, but it is also an extremely interesting portrait of a woman who continues to go through the motions of her everyday life while her private life may be falling apart.

Fiona (and the reader) finds herself emotionally pulled inside the case of a boy who is a Jehovah's Witness and wants to be allowed to refuse medical treatment. Because he is a few months shy of eighteen, Fiona must rule whether he should be allowed to refuse the blood transfusion or whether the hospital can ignore his wishes and proceed to save his life.

I don't know how to convince others that this book is interesting. I have to admit that I would not have picked it up without having read the author's previous work. It's such a simplistic, quiet story that is transformed into a powerful tale in McEwan's hands. I have absolutely nothing in common with Fiona, but her thoughts, emotions, doubts and insecurities feel extremely relatable.

There are some authors that create stories which feel very personal and particular, but simultaneously feel completely universal. For me, this was one of those rarities. I am so glad I took a chance on this book and got to immerse myself in Fiona's life.

Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr2014 contemporary361 s Sharon753

I have to stop reading McEwan's books, because I never enjoy them. There's something clinical, removed, about the way he tells his stories - I don't get the sense that he s human beings, and he is writing about them to display his proficiency with structure and nuance rather than out of interest or sympathy. This is probably a three-star book, but a two-star experience. 304 s Orsodimondo [part time reader at the moment]2,286 2,159

THE INNOCENT


Emma Thompson veste i panni del giudice e il peso del film poggia molto sulla sua bravura. Stanley Tucci interpreta il marito, Fionn Whitehead è Adam Henry, Richard Eyre firma la regia. 2017

McEwan è bravo, molto, è un grande della letteratura contemporanea, e questo suo breve romanzo è un autentico pezzo di bravura.

Un tema penetrante, dati sensibili raccolti dopo acute ricerche, il tutto condito con la sua qualità di scrittura: ed ecco una narrazione che scorre e cattura, anche con i momenti di stasi, di ‘noia’.
Ma di quella noia che è stimolante (il più sublime dei sentimenti, la definì Leopardi).


New York Times, illustrazione di Keith Negley.

Anche questa volta siamo in presenza del tipico McEwan: razionale, documentato, scientifico, perfino illuminista, che però sa sempre come arrivare a scombinare il gioco e la logica scivolando nell’irrazionale, nell’imprevisto e imprevedibile – magari per accenni, magari per sottrazione, aprendo spiragli sull’insolito, su situazioni poco rassicuranti, su emozioni incerte.

Ma questa volta punge un pochino meno, questa volta stimola e inquieta meno del solito, il ‘mestiere’ sembra avere il sopravvento.


Guardian, illustrazione di Matt Blease.

Lo spunto di partenza gli è nato è dalla fascinazione improvvisa che lo prese una sera passata insieme a magistrati e giudici: scoprì così che le sentenze possono essere in qualche modo un sottogenere letterario. Sottovalutato.
Per condire e incorniciare il tema giuridico individuato, mette in scena una crisi matrimoniale della coppia protagonista allÂ’approssimarsi dei sessantÂ’anni, dopo trenta passati insieme.
Ma questo secondo aspetto è abbastanza ovvio e scontato, McEwan non innesta nulla di suo, nulla di nuovo.
E, tutto sommato, anche il caso giuridico, per quanto affascinante, appare in qualche modo irrisolto.
È come se la sua nuova e inaspettata competenza giuridica lo conducesse a semplificare entrambe le vicende, fin quasi alla banalità.

Rimane il piacere della sua scrittura, rimane il piacere di pagine che si leggono con diletto, anche se non graffiano e non incidono come mi ha abituato.



PS
The Innocent è il titolo originale di quel suo magnifico romanzo di venticinque anni fa, in italiano ‘Lettera a Berlino’. In questo ‘The Children Act’, l’innocente di turno è Adam Henry, l’adolescente malato di leucemia, Testimone di Geova, che rifiuta la trasfusione per motivi religiosi, e non avendo ancora raggiunto la maggiore età rientra sotto la giurisdizione della Sezione Famiglia dell’Alta Corte britannica.


Congresso dei Testimoni di Geova allo Stadio Olimpico di Roma 22-24 luglio 2016.inglese202 s Jim Fonseca1,121 7,545

My seventh McEwan. This one strikes me as a bit different from the others I've read. It's almost a 'legal thriller' akin to a John Grisham although I donÂ’t mean to imply that GrishamÂ’s popular writing style is McEwanÂ’s more literary style.

The main character is a woman at the peak of her career as a British family court judge (she is called 'My Lady.') In the acknowledgments the author cites his research on the subject and those who helped him.

The judge deals with issues such as a dispute between a devout Jewish husband and wife where the husband does not want further education for their two daughters but the wife wants them to get a liberal college education. Or child custody cases, some involving children spirited away to North African countries by their fathers.



Adding to the pressure of her decisions, the London newspapers often carry news of the cases and her rulings. Some decisions involve life and death such as Siamese twins that will both die unless the weaker one is sacrificed for the stronger.

The main story involves a young man, just shy of 18, who will die because he is refusing a blood transfusion for leukemia due his religious beliefs as a JehovahÂ’s Witness. She rules that he can be forced to have the transfusion and the boy initially recovers. But after she interviews him in the hospital, he falls in love with her and stalks her. Eventually the case results in tragedy.



Layered over the legal stories are her problems in her personal life. She and her husband are 60, childless, and he’s counting: “We haven’t had sex for a month – I’m going to have an affair.” Although they talk about her cases, it’s clear that he has no idea of the impact these decisions have upon her psyche. They are both married to their jobs more so than to each other.

ItÂ’s an easy read and kept my attention. I thought it more of a popular read than most of his books are. As I look at the books I've read by McEwan, I still Atonement best. I consider him a favorite author, and since I don't give a lot of books a '3' rating, I'm surprised to see that I gave 3s to three of the seven. The books that I thought were weaker were Saturday, Amsterdam and On Chesil Beach.

Photo of Lady Justice Smith from dailymail.co.uk
Photo of Royal Courts of Justice from www.threesixfivecity.com/uploads- shutterstock

[Revised 7/31/23]british-authors courts judge ...more177 s Cecily1,194 4,587

FILM adaptation now out in UK, US, and elsewhere. I've appended a review/comparison of that to this review of the book.



“ She felt shrunken to a geometrical point of anxious purpose .”

This was my eighth McEwan. I rated On Chesil Beach as 5*, five others as 4*, and Black Dogs as 2*. That track record gave me high hopes for The Children Act, raised further by the intriguing dilemma at its heart: whether a bright and articulate JehovahÂ’s Witness boy, very nearly 18, should be forced to have a life-saving blood transfusion, against his religious-based wishes (and those of his parents).

I was disappointed.

Disappointed Because...

Part of the reason was a mismatch of expectations, which is no fault of McEwan’s. Although the dilemma about Adam is important, the erratically-beating heart of the novel is the marriage of Fiona (the judge) and Jack (an academic). The tasteful opulence of their home, life, and careers is established on the first page, and the cracks in their longstanding marriage are exposed on the second. She’s 59 (“in the infancy of old age”), he’s a year older. They never quite got round to having children of their own, their sex life has diminished, and Jack is restless, but honest (and not entirely plausible). Nevertheless, the most incisive and poignant writing relates to Fiona and Jack’s relationship.

The various court cases, including the headline one (which isnÂ’t the only one where a strict and insular religion is a child welfare issue), are echoes, analogies, and catalysts of that core dynamic. I didnÂ’t find them especially insightful, in part because much of it seemed trite, sentimental, and predictable. The dilemma, which I was expecting to be the cream of the book, was more semi-skimmed milk. The legal points were carefully explained and finely balanced, but mostly familiar to anyone whoÂ’s read about such cases in the news. These passages had more of the feel of a text book or debate, than paragraphs of a novel, despite McEwanÂ’s exploring the corresponding emotional consequences.

Two Realms Cross

There is painful irony of Fiona protecting families, while failing to create her own, and of her sorting out other people’s relationships, to the detriment of her own. “Where was her protective judge?”

She has devoted her adult life to the application of man-made law (and the laws of classical music). Adam has committed his life to obeying the Jehovah's Witness interpretation of God's law.
Jack doesn't defer to a similar external authority; maybe that contributes to his crisis and ultimatum?

As Fiona and Jack drift, she becomes increasingly involved in AdamÂ’s case, possibly exacerbating the situation with Jack. Or maybe the fractured marriage frees her, or even sends her, deeper into her work?

Better than it Sounds

The many 4* and 5* attest the merits of the book. Also, for all that I thought the ending was far too easy, it was preferable to the one I feared was coming around the two thirds mark.

Overall, a 2* experience of what is more objectively at least a 3* book. IÂ’ve rounded up because IÂ’ve enjoyed most of his others. And because of the music.

Music

A friend observed that many of McEwanÂ’s works feature music. I hadnÂ’t really noticed that before, but here, itÂ’s impossible to miss. I that aspect. The varying moods and situations of the characters are reflected in what music they listen to and perform. The periods where music is not mentioned are at least as significant.

• Music is integral to Fiona and Jack’s relationship from the start: “He thought he might further seduce her with jazz… He… wanted to prise her loose from the tyranny of strict notation and long-dead genius.”

??? Music relieves stress: “Playing to her inner ear a piece she had learned by heart… It was her ideal self she heard, the pianist she could never become.”

• Music is in the weather: “Over the drumming of raindrops on her umbrella, she heard the lilting andante, walking pace, a rare marking in Bach, a beautiful carefree air over a strolling bass, her own steps falling in with the unearthly light-hearted melody.”

• Music is part of Fiona’s (brief) errant youth, when she was a groupie who dated the lead singer of a band.

• Music is performance, and a step into a different persona or world: “The horizonless hyperspace of music-making, beyond time and purpose.”

• Music is a means of communication: Fiona once learned a jazz piece (his taste more than hers) as a birthday gift to Jack.

• Music is a means of avoiding communication: “She could not bear to hear herself explain her situation and make it irreversibly real… In a spirit of defiance, she played through her Bach partita.”

• Ultimately, music is a metaphor: “Her childlessness was a fugue in itself… a flight from her proper destiny.” (There’s a whole essay in the last three words of that quote.) The fact that Adam opts to learn the violin shortly before he’s expected to die is pertinent, but its power is diluted by McEwan hamfistedly spelling it out as “an act of hope, it implied a future”, lest readers fail to notice.

Is this Really McEwan?

I associate McEwan with dark currents and darker undercurrents, but if they were here, I somehow missed them (other than the general shadows of child welfare and near cultish religion), to the extent that if I'd not known the author, I'd have been more ly to guess Picoult than McEwan. (That may not be fair, as I've only read one Picoult, and that was eight years ago, but I certainly wouldn't have guessed McEwan.) I suppose his trademark brutality is there, but of a very different, and self-imposed kind.

The pacing is also a little odd: the first 130 pages takes place over a couple of days; the remaining 83 pages race through several months.

ItÂ’s extraordinary how different this is - in every respect - from another McEwan portrait of a dysfunctional marriage, On Chesil Beach, reviewed HERE.

Quotes

• “Couples in long marriages aspire to the condition of siblings.”

• “She preferred an imperfect existence” to the risk of leaping into the unknown...
“If he stayed, humiliation, if he left, the abyss.”

• “The worm of suspicion infected her past.”

• “The silence between them expanded.”

• Remembering treats, “These offerings representing only a tiny fraction of the happiness she urged on him”.

• “There must be a price for leaving her and here it was, to be in exile, a supplicant to his previous life. She would not permit him the luxury of two addresses.”

• “Waking up with a cold part of the bed to her left - a form of amputation.”

• “They both knew the vitality of the unsaid… What was required now was a row.”

• “Stepped daintily around each other… They were terse and competitively polite… distracted by raw awareness... of the other’s radioactive presence.”

• “He spoke to her with an awkward delicacy. They kept away from the subject that might have destroyed them.”

• “She belonged to the law as some women had once been brides of Christ.”

• “The law… at its worst not an ass, but a snake.”

• “The confident voice of a man who took his own competence for granted, well used to giving orders… Not men who ran the world, but who made it run.”

• A shiny new hospital, with shops and a business centre around a fountain, “The model was… the modern airport. With altered destinations… and… signs with motorway lettering.”


Update: Real-life case, similar to the secondary one in this story
August 2016 and The Independent reports Ultra-Orthodox Jews launch million-pound fundraising bid to stop children living with 'irreligious parents' after divorce


Film Adaptation, 2018



Ian McEwan, as screenwriter of his own works, has been busy in recent months. First On Chesil Beach (see my review of book and film HERE), and now this.

I enjoyed the film of The Children Act more than the book, which is unusual, but more ly to apply to books IÂ’ve been disappointed with or even disd.

Although the novel is not long, some streamlining was necessary. On screen, the story is almost entirely Fiona determining AdamÂ’s fate, and the consequences of that. Her other cases are mentioned only briefly. ThatÂ’s fine.

Jack and FionaÂ’s failing marriage is relegated to a backdrop. Although I thought it too dominant a storyline in the book, by reducing it so much, the parallels and conflicts between the two relationships are not really explored. Nevertheless, McEwan doesnÂ’t alter the whole premise of the book by tagging on an incongruous postscript, as he did for Chesil.

Music features strongly, as in the book: it sounds as good as it looks. But Fiona and JackÂ’s musical differences are not mentioned at all. Another small loss.

Regardless of that nitpicking, the casting and acting is superb, most obviously Emma Thompson as the luminous, earnest, agonised Fiona, and Fionn Whitehead as thoughtful, passionate, ethereal Adam. Whitehead is definitely an actor to watch out for in future. Jason Watkins is subtly excellent as the not-quite-comic assistant to MÂ’lady, and Stanley Tucci play Jack perfectly.

More details on imdb HERE.bildungsroman film-good-or-better-than-book miscellaneous-fiction ...more168 s John GrishamAuthor 709 books81.5k

THE CHILDREN ACT is about the law and sensational cases, but it is not a legal thriller. Rather, it is a beautiful and sad story of a High Court Judge forced to choose, literally, between life and death. Her ruling, though proper and legally sound, leads to both.166 s Lizzy305 165

From the first page, I realized Ian McEwanÂ’s The Children Act would conquer me. This novel is more a character study than a simple courtroom drama, as it deals with marriage, religion, and life choices. The story centers on the family court Judge Fiona Maye as she faces a crisis in her marriage, questions her life choices and stumbles practically on the edge of both her personal and professional life.
"Her judgment must be ready for printing by tomorrow's deadline, she must work. Her personal life was nothing. Or should have been. Her attention remained divided between the page in her hand and, fifty feet away, the closed bedroom door."
While dealing with the demons in her relationship with her husband, Fiona has to decide a life-and-death case involving a seventeen-year-old JehovahÂ’s Witness boy in need of a blood transfusion to treat his leukemia. I d the characters and felt that McEwan developed then fully for such a short story. From the start, I felt a strong affinity with Fiona and could understand her life dilemmas. A whole person emerges through McEwan prose, flawed most of us, and I could not help but empathize with her. His exquisite narrative, the details of the court cases and its musical references and metaphors only added to make this a refined and earnest reading. "Over the drumming of raindrops on her umbrella, she heard the lilting andante, walking pace, a rare marking in Bach, a beautiful carefree air over a strolling bass, her own steps falling in with the unearthly lighthearted melody as she went by Great Hall. The notes strained at some clear human meaning, but they meant nothing at all. Just loveliness, purified. Or love in its vaguest, largest form, for all people, indiscriminately."
I loved how McEwan takes an already engaging story and adds an interesting element that makes it extraordinary despite its brevity. His sophisticated prose only leaves us wanting more.
"The melancholy tune and the manner in which it was played, so hopeful, so raw, expressed everything she was beginning to understand about the boy. She knew by heart the poet's words of regret. But I, being young and foolish ... Hearing Adam play stirred her, even as it battled her. To take up the violin or any instrument was an act of hope, it implied a future."
As we read on, we discover how FionaÂ’s decisions will come to haunt her as the novel approaches its ending, when she discovers that she still can count on her husband to support her. A powerful, poetic and stunningly realistic novel.
"Everyone knew the urge to run from the world; few dared do it. She listened gravely, or appeared to, and gave short responses and nods. She felt a hospital patient who longs for her kindly visitor to leave so she can resume being ill. The fire took, and Jack, noticing that she was shivering, guided her toward it, and there he poured the rest of her champagne."
Wistful and tragic yet inspiring and hopeful, I found The Children Act outstanding and simply loved it! Highly recommended.
____classics-literay-fiction england-britain read-2016 ...more150 s Debbie479 3,552

IÂ’m embarrassed to say that before The Children Act, I was a McEwan virgin. But now IÂ’ve turned into a McEwan slut, anxious to read his earlier books. I canÂ’t help myself. What a great writer!

This is the story of Fiona, a highly respected judge who presides over family court. She has to make hard decisions that determine the fate of families. She doesnÂ’t seem to question her power or choices until her husband rocks her world and wants her to approve his plan to have an affair. Fiona, the ever rational and confident decision maker, suddenly has to examine her life and question what she is doing now and what she should do in the future.

The book starts with Fiona and her husband having a restrained argument, though underneath the cool façade, Fiona is steaming. She’s passive-aggressive, and she doesn’t communicate her feelings. Her husband acts a jackass.

I was immediately drawn into their lives and was pissed when the next chapter plopped me down in the courthouse. Thankfully, it didnÂ’t take long before I got sucked into FionaÂ’s life as a judge. But even though her professional life was intriguing, I suddenly found myself reading about interesting cases that were leading nowhere. I was left wandering around the courthouse in search of a plot thread to hold on to. For me, the book lost focus at that point. No doubt McEwan wanted to give us a flavor of the moral issues Fiona faced every day, but I wanted to get to the plot line already. Luckily I didnÂ’t have to wander around for very long.

The case that has Fiona all stirred up involves 17-year-old cancer-stricken Adam, a JehovahÂ’s Witness who is refusing a life-saving transfusion. The book goes back and forth between AdamÂ’s case and her broken relationship with hubby. Both stories are good, though the Adam story gets more air-time and is way more compelling.

For most of her adult life, Fiona has not been an emotional creature, and we watch as she struggles with uncomfortable feelings and a big moral crisis. Perhaps for the first time in her life, she experiences intense anger, embarrassment, longing, denial, and remorse.

What makes this book great is the sophisticated language, which flows easily. The writing is nuanced and understated, and thereÂ’s a lot going on between the lines. ItÂ’s straightforward, yet complex. Really, itÂ’s beautiful prose. ItÂ’s obvious that McEwan loves language, and heÂ’s so deft at manipulating words and constructing a compelling story itÂ’s not even funny.

HereÂ’s a sample:

“She inferred from his evasive but morose remarks that in the statistician’s bedroom he had not passed through the gates of paradise.”

Where I really said "Wow!" was when a quiet little incident took place. It happened in the blink of an eye, and it caught me off-guard and gave me a jolt. The incident was small and weird but was pivotal to the story. The scene itself and the way McEwan slowly led up to it, plus the element of surprise which McEwan teased us with, were so masterful it made me shake my head in happy wonder.

Besides the random court cases that were thrown at me at the beginning of the book (text that took up precious space in this compact novel), thereÂ’s a too-long concert scene at the end. IÂ’m sure McEwan meant it as a build-up to the finale, but it was distracting and boring, and I just wanted to get out my red pencil and delete big chunks of it. So yes, there were two cases where an editor could have done some judicious chopping, but otherwise the book is nice and tight.

This is a short book with a big impact. It left me wondering what I would have done in FionaÂ’s shoes. We learn, along with Fiona, that there are no simple answers and that our actions can have huge consequences for others. This is a thought-provoking, insightful, and beautiful character study of a complex woman.

As I said, IÂ’m off to check out McEwanÂ’s earlier books. IÂ’m a book slut and IÂ’m proud of it.

NEWS FLASH! September 2018
Grab some popcorn! The movie version, The Children Act, comes to theaters on September 14. The wonderful Emma Thompson plays the lead. The trailer is fantastic. IÂ’m chomping at the bit!cultural favorite-authors mostly-not-set-in-u-s ...more131 s1 comment Baba3,770 1,176

A High Court judge of great standing, almost 60, Fiona is the quintessential successful career woman; after years of good living, career carving and a good marriage, her husband asks for her permission to have an affair. This supposedly earnest (selfish) request derails Fiona whilst she's overseeing a key case of a 17 year old Jehovah's Witness refusing a blood transfusion that could save his life. A top class McEwan jam, as from within the heart and mind of Fiona we hear her story, her highs, her regrets, her stature and her inner voices. A devastatingly delicious and somewhat dark almost-novella, that I feel would make a wonderful introduction to this talented writer. McEwan handles the Jehovah's Witness case superbly! 8.5 out of 12
contemporary125 s Katie295 426

You could argue that the character at the heart of this novel is dangerously close to being a misogynistic cliché - the career woman who deep freezes her feelings in order to succeed professionally. Fiona Maye is a High Court judge in her late fifties. At the beginning of the novel her husband, maddened by his wife’s sexual detachment, leaves to embark on an affair with a much younger woman.

ItÂ’s easy to forget every judge has a personal life and that her professional life will have repercussions on her private life and vice versa. On any given day, during any given case, who knows what private torments the judge is undergoing and which may easily affect her judgement? McEwan examines what happens when the closed door between the professional and private swings open.

The case she has to try after her husbandÂ’s defection involves a 17 year old boy who has leukemia and requires immediate treatment, but he has been brought up as a JehovahÂ’s Witness and the religion forbids the transfusion of blood. His family and the hospital are thus at loggerheads. To be honest thereÂ’s never much doubt on whose side Fiona will come out as McEwan, one of the most doggedly rational novelists out there, has a hard job concealing his scorn for JehovahÂ’s Witnesses despite protesting otherwise with a passage this - "Religions, moral systems, her own included, were peaks in a dense mountain range seen from a great distance, none obviously higher, more important, truer than another."

We all though love a good court drama and this was easily the most compelling part of the novel. However, once the court case is decided, the novel fell flat on its face for me. There’s very little, if any, lived life in this novel. The novel rarely comes alive as anything but a succession of ideas tailored together into a kind of fable. And everything that happens after the sentence felt wooden and forced. The subplot involving Fiona and her husband always seemed an underpainting and never really acquired body. At times implausible – so much left unsaid that it was watching two people with the sound turned off. It’s a short novel but even so it felt padded out with a lot of unnecessary detail. In fact the more I think about it, the more critical and disappointed I become. Poor show from the man who wrote Atonement.


husbands-wives published-2014 set-in-the-uk122 s JulieAuthor 6 books2,072

Perhaps itÂ’s best I read The Children Act in the space of a day, curled on my sofa. Otherwise I might have been spied in my favorite cafe purring a contented cat, stroked by the sublimity of Ian McEwanÂ’s prose.

Words adore Ian McEwan, submitting readily to his firm but empathetic hand. They are sleek and gorgeous dancers to his choreography; alone, the words are admirable, but under his direction they assume nuance and strength. His works never fail to take my breath away. It is a comfort to know, regardless of the story I am about to witness, that I will be treated with the utmost respect by an author who assumes I revere language and composition as much as he does. It is because of writers Ian McEwan that I have come to cherish the art of writing.

But even the most skilled and erudite writing cannot save a flawed story. Fortunately, this author takes his craft as seriously as his art.

In the vein of Saturday, The Children Act imposes an ethical dilemma on a member of the elite caste of British society and places its protagonist in crisis. In this most recent of McEwan’s thirteen novels, Fiona Maye, a High Court judge in Britain’s Family Division, hears a case of a young Jehovah's Witness with leukemia whose parents refuse to allow a critical medical procedure. His religion forbids blood transfusions and the hospital has appealed to the High Court to force the treatment on the dying patient. Time is running out—Fiona, or 'My Lady' as she is addressed in court, has only a few days to hear the case and render her decision before it is too late to save the young man’s life.

Complicating an already impossible situation is Adam, the patient. He is nearly the age of consent—just a few months shy of his eighteenth birthday—and his objection to the transfusion is as strong as his parents’. There is legal precedent to allowing a older minor to make life or death decisions about his care, and the judge must decide if Adam is fully aware of the consequences of his choice. His death will be agonizing, or in the unly event he lives, his future will be a half-life spent in blindness and compromised mental capacity. Standing against her is a sheltered faith of dubious theological framework, and the right to determine one’s own destiny.

The control and confidence with which Fiona Maye handles her cases belies the mess of her life at home. At the start of this slim novel, her husband Jack, a university professor, announces he would to have an affair and hopes sheÂ’ll understand his need to assert his sexuality in the waning light of his life. Fiona and Jack have been married for thirty years and although they have no children, their life is enriched with the frequent presence of nieces and nephews.

McEwan brings to the page a paradox that fascinates me: how many can be in such supreme command of their professional lives, yet find themselves mired in disaster at home. But this is where The Children Act stumbles and strains for me. Jack offers as defense for the necessity of his fling the fact that he and Fiona have not had sex for “seven weeks and one day,” a period during which Fiona was trying an exceptionally draining and emotional case. As she ruminates about their marriage, Fiona recalls an active and passionate sex life.

As sensitive and starkly real a portrayal of new marriage as McEwan rendered in On Chesil Beach, I found myself disbelieving the mature marriage in The Children Act. I couldnÂ’t determine if the author expects us to believe a man would pursue an affair after a brief dry season and that he would want his wife to accept to an open marriage, a marriage that had heretofore known great sex. But later, as Fiona and Jack find their way back to each other, the tiny, tender moments of frail solidarity seep in and mostly redeem the incredulous bits.

The troubled marriage plays in the background. It is the case of Adam and his faith that allows us to enter FionaÂ’s intellect and to battle with our own ethical and moral demons. FionaÂ’s internalized anguish over her own childlessness adds poignancy to her strength on the bench of family court. She determines the fate of so many children, yet Fate has determined that she will have none of her own.

In this era of doorstop novels—those giant, bloated affairs that become the darlings of the literati (and of me, yes, I have loved many a 500-hundred-plus-pager in recent months!)—it is a gift to read a rich, complete, thoughtful novel that combines meticulous research with exciting imagination in a mere 221 pages. The Children Act isn’t perfect (and what a relief that it isn't, right?). But it’s vital, full of emotion, and so beautifully written, it made me purr.
best-of-2014 british-isles-theme-setting contemporary-fiction ...more113 s2 comments Angela M 1,346 2,160

DonÂ’t let the fact that this is a pretty short novel deceive you into thinking that there is not much substance here. When I finished reading this book, I couldnÂ’t stop thinking about the enormous power that Family Court judges have over the lives of so many young children whose families are in crisis and then even if the decision seems right, what happens to these children afterwards? Fiona Maye, a High Court Judge in the Family Division of the Courts in England (and this could be anywhere) has had to make many decisions in the course of her career that impact the lives of children.

We learn of some of the thought provoking cases that she has ruled on – a custody battle over two Jewish sisters whose divorcing parents are at odds over whether or not their daughters should be brought up in the strict orthodox Jewish tradition; the case of conjoined twins and whether to save one or let them both die. I was completely fascinated with the description of the laws and then the reasoning behind her decisions. Although, I felt that her decisions were clear and reasonable, the important thing was that they really seemed to be looking out for the best interest of the children.

The case that is at the heart of this novel involves 17 year old Adam Henry who has leukemia and his Jehovah Witness parents refuse to allow him a blood transfusion that will save his life. AdamÂ’s story and FionaÂ’s ultimate decision, the relationship that they develop, and what happens to Adam captivated my attention such that I couldnÂ’t put this book down.

Fiona herself is going through a crisis in her marriage and has some decisions to make about herself and her own life. Whether she believes it or not, the court decisions have affected her life and her marriage. I have to admit that I was not shocked at the ending, but none the less impacted by it. This is a must read for anyone who appreciates the intelligent, cohesive writing of Ian McEwan.
103 s2 comments Agnieszka258 1,066


In my opinion McEwan is very uneven writer. I really enjoyed The Cement Garden, Enduring Love and Sweet Tooth; The Child in Time moved me deeply while Amsterdam, to put it mildly, was rather disappointment and The Comfort of Strangers total disaster.

McEwan relishes quirk and macabre, s to handling very disturbing and bizarre, not to say creepy behaviours and relationships in his novels. He is very efficient and his writer's skills are indubitable but there is some coldness about his writing. As if he only was doing his homework and wanted to meet someoneÂ’s expectations. Sometimes he tries too much as if he wanted to say us lo and behold, here I am, I can take any theme, any hot topic and adapt it in my book. I can write on spies and an euthanasia, on amorality and an obsession, on strange relationships and so on.

In The Children Act McEwan raises really weighty issues and moral dilemmas human dignity, freedom of choice, the right to refusal of treatment, marital breakdown but it all lacks true involvement. He just glides through the problems; portraits of the main characters of the drama seem too sketchily drawn and the end feels somewhat hasty.

His protagonists enter the scene, make their speech to swiftly disappear. I would have probably more enjoyed that one if McEwan had shown more interest in deepening background, more heart and passion in delving moral quandaries. LetÂ’s take Adam. He lost everything not gaining anything in return, such situation just beggs for more space and psychological nuances.

Maybe because I expected more commitment, more sharpness, more roughness it all felt a bit too smooth. But it is not a bad novel since McEwan is really deft writer only I found his writing here too cold, almost clinical.2015 mcewan own-a-copy ...more95 s Wen116 42

4.5 stars. For me a book by McEwan is a low-risk pick, as he would unly let me down. If all else failed, IÂ’d always have his exquisite prose and his good ear for music to fall back on. It turned out, this skinny 221-page book was one of my favorites of his.

This book had two main themes running in parallel: the marriage crisis between 59-year-old high court family division judge Fiona and her geology professor husband Jack, and the emotional entanglement between Fiona and a 17-year-old boy Adam, whose life was saved by FionaÂ’s ruling against the fundamental belief of JehovahÂ’s Witness. The two themes from time to time intersperse with each other over jagged terrains, fed into each other, and indirectly influenced the outcome of each.

Comparing to half of dozen other McEwanÂ’s books I have read, this one was particularly polemical. Should it be morally acceptable for one partner of a listless marriage to occasionally indulge in the carnal excitement elsewhere without breaking the vows? Do religiously devout parents have the right to make life-or-death medical treatment decisions on behalf of their children?

McEwan adequately and fairly presented supporting arguments through his storytelling for both sides, but he didnÂ’t go to great length to hide his personal position regarding to open marriage and religions; for example, just consider the seemingly hypocritic reactions of AdamÂ’s parents after FionaÂ’s ruling that saved their sonÂ’s life.

McEwan once again impressed me by his excellent portrayal of a female protagonist. Fiona was an emotionally-sensitive middle-aged woman who had low tolerance for risks, evidenced by the fact that she was constantly distracted at work by her muddled thoughts on JackÂ’s betrayal. But her job as a judge required her to be cool-headed and rational, and to stay personally detached to maintain objectivity. The conflicts of these two forces manifested itself in her messy involvement with the boy Adam and the tragic ending.

Adam was also a strong and memorable character. He was precocious, but not as mature as most people associated with him in the book believed. He was all too eager to impress and please those in possession of authority. He romanticized and glorified death, not so much influenced by his religion, as everybody had thought, as by the artistic personality, consistent with him being a quick study in poetry and violin. His initial feeling toward Fiona was little more than starry-eyed worship (he insisted on calling Fiona my lady), and he stalked Fiona only to find a new anchor after being lost in the religionless world. However, the feeling was elevated and distorted by the kiss as confusing to Fiona as to himself.

I’ve read complaints about Most McEwan’s protagonists being upper-middle class and having eminent life. His prose certainly reflects that—elegant, refined, fluent, dressed up… more akin to a glass of wine than a bottle of beer. However, I find this style comforting because his metaphoric expressions are the kind of prose being appreciated in Chinese literature.

The two poems Adam composed, and the lyrics of the song Down by the SallyÂ’s Gardens were heart-wrenchingly beautiful. They threaded together AdamÂ’s story in the most compelling way. I had a strong premonition in the middle of the book when Fiona and Adam performed the song together at his bedside.

I could not find an exact violin-and-voice version. This one I thought might match the mood of the story.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=027ZJ...

I found Fiona and JackÂ’s story less powerful, and the resolution at the end a bit forced and too convenient. I felt I wasnÂ’t provided enough material to get sufficiently acquainted with Jack. Hence 4.5 stars.87 s Kalliope691 22




Not long ago, while having my morning coffee and while perusing GR, I encountered FionnualaÂ’s review of this book. It immediately drew my attention because not only am I a fan of FionnualaÂ’s takes on books and have d several of McEwanÂ’s books, but also because I was going to attend a trial in court within the next few hours.

Children and parents. Parents and children. Oof!. What should be only a love relationship can easily, and too often, turn into a thorny one, charged with distressing emotions. Nature can go awry indeed.

Luckily for me, I was just attending to give support to a friend. Nonetheless, the topic has been engaging my attention and I immediately ordered the book. I finished it last night and it proved to be again a very engaging book, as McEwanÂ’s books often are. I read it in a couple of days.

And in a few hours I will be at court again. The trial had to reconvene because someone had simply not shown up.

Reading the novel I particularly enjoyed having the point of view of the judge, someone who in principle stays out of the action but who has been placed at the centre of it by McEwan. It seems that the author, who is also situated outside of his plot, has been an actor in similar circumstances. He should know then.

Familiar are McEwanÂ’s ability in sustaining the intrigue, familiar is also his portrayal of obsessive minds (and Enduring Love comes to mind), but I also enjoyed his discussion on music.

And here I could not help bringing in some information I had about McEwan and his having been the "Literary Guest" of the Pianist Angela Hewitt in her Trasimeno Music Festival, a few years ago. As the main character is also a serious amateur pianist whenever I read the musical sections I could not help but think of how much of McEwanÂ’s writing would have originated from discussions with Hewitt. And my conclusion was that a fair amount, not only is one of Bach's Partitas featured (and Hewitt's rendition is the one I normally listen to), but also because at one point, the stupendous, exclusive, and rarely seen in concerts, Fazioli piano features in the novel.




Angela Hewitt is known for her keen support of this extraordinary instrument. She will not play but on a Fazioli.

Anyway, time to forget the music and leave for court. The emotionally stinging situations, the discussions of the entangled legal system, so intriguingly presented by McEwan, will be on my mind while I hear the judicial proceedings today.

But will return to the music - the best solace.





2015 britain fiction-english82 s Suz1,297 684

Not having read this author before, IÂ’m very glad to have picked this one off of my 300 plus owned books. It will be easy to miss many great books this way wonÂ’t it?!

Fiona holds an immensely important job being a highly regarded High Court Judge presiding over families. SheÂ’s at a crossroads, or rather her husband is, and we see a fine story unfold as a marriage is being questioned and a brilliant woman teeters on the edge. At the same time Fiona has to decide how to apply a life and death judgement involving a seventeen year old JehovahÂ’s Witness boy, Adam. He is a beautiful character and he lit up this story. The finale gave me hope for Fiona and her patient and loving husband, but I was oh so sad for Adam.

Literary fiction is not my genre of choice, but it was an effective story. Perhaps too much legal technicality that to me was not required, but the writing was good and it was a quick read. My thanks go again to ‘The Whisperer’, who has provided me with another quality book.
gave-away gift-from-goodreads-friend literary-fiction74 s Fionnuala814 Read

One of the Ian McEwan books I've most enjoyed and a book which inspired the most vigorous debate my book group has ever had - a debate which felt a day in court as all the 'barristers' present argued their cases; one, for the rights of children; another, the rights of parents; a third the letter of the Law; a fourth, the rights of the characters; a fifth, the rights of readers; a sixth the wrongs of the author.
No, scratch that last one off the record, court secretary; the conclusion was that the author had more than competently handled the facts of the case although there was disagreement about how he wound them up and some doubt as to how he acquired them in the first place, a piece of evidence having come to light at the last minute to indicate that some of his facts might be inadmissible since they infringed on the privacy of a third party - his wife!
The court adjourned at a late hour.bookgroup65 s Ron Charles1,078 49.3k

Believers of a millennial bent might consider this a sign: It’s not every summer that we get two dark and serious novels focused on Jehovah’s Witnesses. The first was Scott Cheshire’s “High as the Horses’ Bridles” about a boy preacher who drifts from the faith. And now, the second coming: Ian McEwan’s “The Children Act,” which puts the church’s beliefs on trial. Surely, members of this small Christian sect would prefer, instead, to get their own hilarious Broadway musical, but authors work in mysterious ways.

The two novels have little in common, except that in both a faithless protagonist is deeply shaken by the behavior of a devout Witness. CheshireÂ’s debut is a roiling storm of conflicting styles and artistic energy, fueled by the authorÂ’s autobiographical demons. McEwan, whoÂ’s spent more time on the Booker shortlist than in church, has produced a svelte novel as crisp and spotless as a priestÂ’s collar.

“The Children Act” is too long to call a novella, but it has that focused intensity and single arc. At the dramatic center of the story is Fiona Maye, a mature and well-respected British High Court judge in the Family Division. Fiona has devoted much of her career to adjudicating bloody conflicts between once-devoted husbands and wives. Every day, she observes, “Loving promises were denied or rewritten, once easy companions became artful combatants crouching behind counsel, oblivious to the costs.” In her weary astonishment at these savage ex-lovers, one can sense the expertise McEwan gained when his own divorce and custody fight spilled out into the public arena some 15 years ago. But if abusive spouses absorb the bulk of Fiona’s court time, she has also ruled famously in more wrenching matters. With efficiency and elegance so alien to legal writing, McEwan draws us through her reasoning on several cases, such as one involving conjoined twins, whose devout Catholic parents refused to give permission for them to be separated, though doing so was the only way to save one of them. Fiona appreciates that these crises are always wrenching, always murky. She’s suspicious of secular utilitarians who are “impatient of legal detail, blessed by an easy moral equation.”

Given that curriculum vitae, when the central case of this novel arrives, we know Fiona to be a conscientious jurist wholly determined to judge righteous judgment, someone who believes she brings “reasonableness to hopeless situations.”

The call comes late in the evening: A hospital requests an emergency hearing for permission to treat a young leukemia patient who refuses to accept a transfusion that could save his life. Adam Henry and his parents are Jehovah’s Witnesses, who believe that the Bible expressly forbids “mixing your own blood with the blood of an animal or another human being.”

McEwan re-creates the hearing in the brisk style of an ultra-efficient courtroom, the testimonies and examinations proceeding apace, drained of any artificial flourish or suspense. Instead, he designs the facts to make AdamÂ’s case as morally and legally vexed as possible: Just three months shy of his 18th birthday, Adam can already see that promised land in which his right to determine his own health care would be inviolate.

McEwan may be an atheist, but un his late friend Christopher Hitchens, he’s a great novelist, not a great polemicist, and he knows that there can be no tension — no art — if Adam and his parents are reduced to ignorant Bible-thumpers clad in what Hitchens called the “heavy coat of ignorance and fear.” Fiona reflects her creator’s fair regard for these Witnesses. She finds their doctor condescending and snobby. She’s sensitive to the way differences in class and education play into her approach to this case, and she knows she’s weighing one of the most fundamental human rights. “Courts should be slow to intervene in the interests of the child against the religious principles of the parents,” Fiona thinks. “Sometimes they must. But when?” Is the state so infallible and supreme that for want of 120 days, a young man should be torn from his family and his community and forced to submit to a medical procedure he abhors?

For his part, McEwan doesn’t venture much into the spiritual dimensions of this conflict. Adam’s devout parents appear only briefly; there’s little effort here to explore their beliefs. But that’s where the novel differs from its controversial premise: “The Children Act” is not primarily about religious radicalism or the conflict between faith and science; it’s about the way a woman’s well-ordered life is shaken by a confluence of youthful passion and old betrayal.

You see, the hospital’s petition involving Adam arrives on the very night Fiona’s husband of 35 years announces that he wants to have an affair. “I need it. I’m fifty-nine. This is my last shot,” he tells Fiona with calm and creepy candor. “I love you, but before I drop dead, I want one big passionate affair.”

In the precisely choreographed pages that follow, McEwan presents a ferociously intelligent and competent woman struggling to rule on a complex legal matter while feeling humiliated and betrayed by her husband. Beneath her formidable wisdom and accomplishments swirl all the old anxieties of loneliness and shame. Fiona knows that “to be the object of general pity was also a form of social death. The nineteenth century was closer than most women thought.” She’s spent decades training her mind to discriminate between relevant and irrelevant facts, to identify patches of fogginess and sentimentality in her thinking, but this crisis at home threatens to disrupt her carefully managed equilibrium. In that disrupted state, she’s moved by Adam’s irrepressible spirit, and she raises expectations that could either save or doom them both.

And who could blame her? In Adam, McEwan has created a captivating creature with the confidence and eery mirth of a young man hovering at the precipice. Distilled by illness, he has only his concentrated naivete left. Even as he struggles to breathe, he’s intoxicated by the fawning attention, the promise of glory, the romantic tragedy of his wasted, blue-veined body. Fiona’s encounters with him are brief, but absolutely captivating — for us and her. Can this famously careful woman be careful enough with his fragile soul to understand the true demands of his welfare?

In the end, McEwan arrives at the same conclusion Hitchens left behind, but there’s no stridency in these pages, which glide from one quietly perfect sentence to another. “The Children Act” doesn’t enact the happy triumph of humanism. Instead, it recognizes how fragile we all are and how cautious we should be about disrupting another’s well-ordered universe. As Emily Dickinson warned, “The Truth must dazzle gradually/ Or every man be blind.” Given its odd subject matter, this is unly to be anyone’s favorite McEwan novel, but with its mix of arcane expertise, emotional intensity and especially its attention to the ever-surprising misdirections of the heart, it’s another notable volume from one of the finest writers alive.

This review originally appeared in The Washington Post:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/enterta...
religion-spirituality62 s Elyse Walters4,010 11.3k

"My Lady is Captivating"!

"Adam Henry is Captivating"

This entire story is """CAPTIVATING"""!!!

Delicate Situations!!!!!!

Written with real energy --totally 'ALIVE'....

I've been a long time fan of Ian McEwan --and this small novel (with 5 parts) --confirms the depth and breadth of Ian's talents! Marialyce 2,078 694

How truly utterly perfect was this story! The story was of a family court judge, her husband, her "on the rocks" marriage and the young man so tragically ill who came into her life and offered her love and the chance for redemption.

It was a beautiful story and one that sent goosebumps down your spine as the ending approached and try as you might you could not change it. Caught up in the turmoil that parents and religion can oftentimes put children through, the novel captures the true element of the concept of without a given belief system in place humans struggle with themselves. Change or challenge a long held belief and oftentimes one is thrown to the lions without protection.

This is the stuff of headlines of medical ethics and its sometimes clash with religious beliefs and customs. Caught in the middle of all this, lies a child's welfare. Hard religious beliefs can and do impact a child in many ways and at times can be life threatening. However, once one opens the gate for disbelief a person might be left rudderless and bereft of what they once believed was the concepts that made them who they were.

Sad and tragic yet inspiring, this book was outstanding in its approach and I loved it! 61 s Charlotte May761 1,217

This was a tough, emotional read. 3.5 ??

Fiona Maye is a judge in familial law. She deals with everything from custody battles to the separation of a pair of conjoined twins in order to save the life of one despite the death of the other.

Her current case: a 17 year old boy suffering with Leukaemia is refusing a blood transfusion due to his beliefs as a JehovahÂ’s Witness. Fiona has to decide whether AdamÂ’s choice is to be respected, whether he fully understands the implications of what will happen if he doesnÂ’t get the transfusion and whether he is being coerced into this decision through his parents and religious leaders.

Despite being just over 200 pages this is a strong character study that really makes you think. And of course it being Ian McEwan it packs a powerful punch at the end. After I finished I felt numb - a really powerful read.

**********************

Another Christmas book present - this one looks so interesting! If Atonement is anything to go by then this will be great!contemporary-recent faith illness-mental-terminal ...more62 s Iris P171 216

The Children Act

I read this book in two days, which for a slow reader me is quite an achievement.
There's a certain "stream of consciousness" vibe on McEwan's writing, at least on this novel, but I absolutely adore his graceful, elegant prose.
Not sure why this book is classified as a mystery/thriller, it's nothing of the sort. However, if the idea of a novel featuring a strong female family court judge in charge of handling complex ethical issues sounds intriguing, this novel might be for you.

If nothing else, you might enjoy McEwan's exquisite writing, it's also a very short read so probably a good return on your investment. I've been meaning to read The Children Act for a couple of years now, glad I finally got to it.books-on-marriage british fiction ...more60 s Fabian977 1,923

A tad (& maybe even more than just a tad) Dullsville. , hello! We know you are the fantastic writer of the incredible ATONEMENT, that you won't ever get to that level again. We recognize it. Your prose is masterful, damn! But... seriously? Not even an ATTEMPT at something more interesting, historical, heck, even more optimistic? McEwan has the uncanny ability to reach that awful and cynical and megableak conclusion that SOME humans are truly nothing; that their humanity is void. The we are less than people, if you are not part of the London upper crust that is. & that's how I DEEPLY feel.

& this is a mixture (as they usually all are, right? McEwan's novels) of my most hated novel ever, SATURDAY, and ENDURING LOVE. Yes, we get a London Judge ("she had a North Londoner's ignorance of and disdain for the boundless shabby tangle of London south of the river." (97) Ugh, Whatever!)--her decisions decide fates and move stories to their moralistic end. There is a strange effect building up here, when conversations in her journey are abridged (as if the reader is a tad dim, we must get the Cliff's notes to understand--you actually feel looked down upon! Dialogue is not reported, but summarized. Strange!), not included in their actual full form. Another case of editing important stuff so that it could be ingested wholly by dumbasses. The protagonist is basically god, the writer more so. Yeah, nothing to see here...

Also, thank you for FINALLY ruining my masterpiece-reading streak, Ian McEwan! I guess I deserved to read some shitty book sporadically between so many brilliant ones...60 s cameron421 119

I could just strangle Ian McEwan. I said the same thing after reading On Chesil Beach. While reading that book, which I bought NEW, I realized it had been a short story in the New Yorker to which he had added a few pages and then called it a book. It was a good short story but never enough for a book. I wrote him and chided him for the switch but to no avail.
The Children Act felt the same way to me. Maybe he's putting his kids through college and needs some quick dough. I thought the marriage plot was simplistic and shallow. Same with the characters. In fact, I knew little about them by the end and didn't really care anyway. Married couples stop communicating. YAWN.
The sub plot with a 15 year old boy was ridiculously made up dialogue and just plain silly. I happen to be around many teenagers and his character was a huge stretch without an adequate backstory.
I waded through this short novella, looking for the old McEwan spark. Didn't happen. You just think McEwan's wife would say something , " Ian, enough of this crap. Write something splendid about which you give a damn." How's that for communication?
I don't it when go on and on and on analyzing every chapter and event because even though it may not be a spoiler it still ruins the read for me. So I'll just write this opinion.
How anyone could write Atonement, Sweet Tooth and Amsterdam.....even Saturday and The Cement Garden...and then let this be published is beyond me but that may be what happens when one becomes uber successful. Sure is hard for the fans, though.

54 s1 comment Maciek569 3,575

As I began to read The Children Act, I thought that it would be the antithesis to McEwan's other novel, On Chesil Beach, where the marriage of a young newlyweds is damaged beyond repaid in a single moment, by what essentially is lack of communication.

In The Children Act the couple is much older and has been married for decades - Fiona is a 59 year old court judge, and is married to Jack, a 60 year old professor of ancient history. They have been together for 35 years, and led what could be described as a succesful and stable life - until now. One evening Jack surprises Fiona with a confession - he asks her to give him permission to begin an affair with a much younger assistant. Although he states that he love Fiona and wants to stay with her, Jack justifies his demand for an open marriage by claiming that her passion for him has evaporated - their sex life is non-existent, and at 60 the affair is a last chance at a passionate and exciting relationship.

In On Chesil Beach the couple's tragedy resulted from not knowing one another and not talking about their issues; I expected The Children Act to be the total opposite, an analysis of the rise and fall of a mature marriage with the couple engaging in a honest and open conversation about their own lives. This doesn't happen - although torn internally by her need for Jack in her life, Fiona is justifiably infuriated and refuses to even talk to him about his needs and reasons behind them, which only disgust her.

The issue of Fiona and Jack's failing marriage is too quickly swept under the rug when Fiona is ordered to judge over a case involving Adam, a teenager on the verge of legal maturity who suffers from leukemia, and his parents - Jehovah's Witnesses, who object to him undergoing a blood transfusion which could save his life. Both parents object on religious grounds, using scripture as proof that a transfusion is incompatible with their beliefs - which the boy shares and has no objection to, even if they will eventually result in his very painful death.

The focus from Fiona's marriage shifts to the court case, as Fiona has to hear testimonies from doctors, church officials, Adam's parents and Adam himself to understand all sides of the argument. To make the difficult decision, she decides to visit him as he slowly withers away - finding a passionate and talented teenager, whose interest in music and the arts draws her to him and who slowly becomes obsessed with her, which reminded me of another English novel - Notes on a Scandal.

This is a short, but ambitious book - as it tries to take on many challenging topics: disintegration of a long marriage, the influence parents have on their children, and the influence that religion has on their decisions. Despite being well-constructed and written, I found that it simply had nothing new or particularly insightful to add on these issues - it was more of a clinical presentation of them, rather than engaging fiction dealing with these dilemmas. The reader is shown all points of view regarding Adam's case, but my real interest lay in the relationship of Fiona and Jack - how both are going to deal with the crisis it suffers. Unfortunately, both Fiona and Jack are presented as rather detached characters, not only from one another but from life in general. I found the story to contain hardly any surprises, and could easily see the denouncement - which was probably intended to be shocking - coming from a mile away. As a result, the novel (or rather a novella, considering its length) carries less impact than it might have had were all its themes developed further.

The Children Act will undoubtedly stir interest and gain readership, but it's certainly not Ian McEwan's best work, and I found his last novel - Sweet Tooth - to be more interesting and enjoyable.
2014-releases read-in-2014 reviewed53 s Margitte1,188 593

Fiona Maye is a High Court Judge in London, married to Jack, and an experienced pianist. Her fierce intelligence and immersion in her cases rendered the opinion of the Lord Chief Justice himself describing her as"Godly distance, devilish understanding, and still beautiful."

Almost sixty years old, Fiona finds herself in a failing marriage while presiding over a case in which a multi-talented 17-year-old teenager, a member of the Jehova's Witnesses religious group, refuses to receive blood transfusions as a treatment for his leukemia. In her typical crisp prose, which has been described as almost ironic, almost warm, and in her typical compact terms for which she have received high praise by her colleagues, Fiona resolves this case within a day. However, the aftermath will change everything.

A moral dilemma establishes itself often when life itself demands different solutions to the same articles of law. When to give life and when to take it away, and how to deal with the emotions and consequences after the fact. Where does the decision ends? Relying heavily on the British Children Act of 1989, Fiona delivers her judgement on this case, witholding justment on her own life for the time being. However, life is short, and the consequences of decisions is often final ...

It is the first encounter for me with this author's work and it was a striking one. Imagine my delight when I realized that this intricate tale, told in eloquent prose, was concluded in only 167 pages! Needless to say that the author's economy with words, the careful selection of detail, and the fast-moving plot, left a feeling of gratitude as well as admiration.

The clever way in which the author used music to glue the story together, brought another much deeper dimension to the story. It not only act as a grande finale to emotional turmoil, but also brought insight into a situation that was dotted with emotional warfare and the physical distress of the parties involved.

The final outcome came as a surprise; the emotions it left me with were real and the moral of the story kept me thinking about the characters and the circumstances for many hours afterwards. I was baffled, enchanted, mind-blowned, and sad. However, it was destiny that had the final say and it was good one. So very good.

A wonderful, deeply touching story that left me grateful for the experience. There are much deeper elements hidden in this story that can be explored.

A perfect read!

PS. After finishing my review, I hopped over to read friends's of the book. Since often contains spoilers, I prefer to read the book first and then enjoy the thoughts of others afterwards. By reading the book first I have more insight in the . So if you have read the book already, you will be grateful for these recommendations below.

Two of friends that deepened my understanding and appreciation for this book, and changed my experience completely, can be read here:
1) Roger Brunyate
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

2) aPriL does feral sometimes
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Thank you Roger and April. 2016-read british-author british-novels ...more51 s Glenn Sumi404 1,703

The law, ethics, religion and even music intertwine in fascinating ways in McEwan's compact and powerful novel.

Sixty-something Londoner Fiona Maye is a respected High Court judge faced with an emergency decision involving a 17-year-old boy with leukemia who refuses to receive a life-saving blood transfusion because he and his family are Jehovah's Witnesses. She visits the boy in the hospital and, shortly afterwards, makes her decision about whether or not he is capable of denying treatment (he's a few months short of 18, and adulthood, and thus making his own decision).

Meanwhile, Fiona's domestic life has been upended. Her professor husband has just left her for a much younger woman, and she's bitterly changed the locks on their flat so he can't return.

McEwan is a stunning writer. His prose is impeccable, and he carefully carves out Fiona's history – her youthful ambitions, her career, her love for her husband, Jack, how and why they're childless. A recent case involving Siamese Twins has affected her more deeply than she's understood, but she can't articulate that to Jack. And it's fascinating seeing how she reacts to the fallout over her decision about the boy with leukemia.

Fiona's also an amateur musician, preparing for an upcoming concert with another lawyer. Reading this book reminded me that McEwan is one of the most effective and insightful writers about classical music. (See also: Amsterdam and On Chesil Beach, two of the five or six McEwan books I've read.)

The result is a deeply moving and profound meditation on the meaning of life. I'm going to seek out the recent film version, which, alas, made me picture, as I was reading, stars Emma Thompson as Fiona and Stanley Tucci as Jack.

I'm not sure if McEwan meant it or not, but the book's denouement reminded me a lot of James Joyce's magnificent novella "The Dead," which also deals with people's everyday problems set against the finality of death. Pretty good authorial company to be in. 51 s Diane S ?4,846 14.3k

An author, I believe, takes a risk when he centers his novel around one character. So often a reader will rate their enjoyment of the book on whether or not they can relate to the character. In this story the main character is Fiona, approaching sixty she is a high court judge in the family court. She had given up the idea of having a child, concentrating on her career. She is long married to Jack, but their marriage has now hit a big road block.

In the beginning I felt a huge distance from the character, what kept me reading was her very interesting court cases and her inner thoughts about her judgments. But then, she does a few, very human out of character things and I slowly began to warm to her. Soon a big case, involving a seventeen yr. old boy, a Jehovah's witness whose parents and himself are refusing a life-saving blood transfusion on religious grounds, will alter her life in unexpected ways.

This is a quiet, introspective novel, the writing almost seamless. I enjoyed all the music references throughout as Fiona and a fellow lawyer play at various events. A whole person began to emerge, flawed most of us, I began to take this character to heart. My enjoyment of this book slowly crept up on me and I realized just how much this author had included in this rather short novel. So I ended up liking this much more at the end than I did at the beginning.

ARC from the publisher.51 s Lynne King496 751

Given the unique circumstance of this case, IÂ’ve decided that I would to hear from Adam Henry himself. ItÂ’s not his knowledge of scripture that interests me so much as his understanding of his situation, and of what he confronts should I rule against the hospital. Also, he should know that he is not in the hands of an impersonal bureaucracy. I shall explain to him that I am the one who will be making the decision in his best interests.

I had never read any of this authorÂ’s books before, in fact had no inclination whatsoever, but upon reading two by GR friends, I decided to try it. There were three aspects in its favour. Firstly, I love courts and anything legal and the fact that this would be viewed from the standpoint of Fiona Maye, a leading High Court judge. Secondly, this concerned the Children Act and thirdly, and IÂ’m not religious, Jehovah Witnesses were involved. They fascinate me for some obscure reason.

Would I prove to be right in my gut feeling about this book?

The plot is basically very straight forward. A High Court judge has to rule on a case with an underage (by purely three months) Jehovah Witness, who is refusing blood transfusions, on whether to respect the boyÂ’s/parentsÂ’ beliefsÂ’ or insist that hospital treatment be carried out in order to save his life.

Running in parallel are the matrimonial problems that Fiona is beginning to face with her husband Jack. He announces that heÂ’s going to have an affair, and to truly enjoy himself before heÂ’s too old. Nevertheless he still loves his wife but feels that they are more brother and sister. HeÂ’s sixty. He has a woman in mind. I daresay one of these crises that men come across from time to time. Also he feels that the sexual part of his marriage is missing, for after all:

ItÂ’s been seven weeks and a day. Are you honestly content with that?

HeÂ’s actually been counting the days since he last had sexual relations with his wife. Do men really do that after so many years of marriage? WellÂ…Perhaps the problem is on his part. Perhaps his wife had a work-related problem?

However, the way Fiona reacted after Jack had left the flat with his suitcase was exactly what I would have done!

The book is indeed multi-faceted. Here is Fiona, a highly successful individual, who loves her profession. But she also feels regret that she never had children. It was either the wrong time of her life with her career, and with that of her husband, then time passed as did her fertile period, and finally it was too late to have children. I could indeed relate to that fact.

Why she would decide to meet Adam Henry in the hospital seemed illogical to me but then itÂ’s part of the plot. To discover an interest in music and poetry with the adolescent certainly played a major part in her ruling.

The way the book flows from one situation to the next continued to hold my interest. The discussions on leukaemia fascinated me as did the life for High Court Judges on the circuit. The views of AdamÂ’s father also spring to mind.

Touching aspects when Adam insists on calling Fiona “My Lady” but then it all begins to go horribly wrong when he starts sending her poetry and she makes a major error in her reaction to this; as she did with the ensuing events, especially when Adam puts forward a completely unacceptable suggestion to her.

I found this book so poignant, I loved the attention to detail, the structure and I also applaud the author for demonstrating a womanÂ’s feelings as well as he has.

Finally, I must confess that I never know what it is about a book that sings to me but this book did indeed and that's the main thing.
2015-books-to-read50 s Betsy RobinsonAuthor 11 books1,144

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