Black Dogs
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Black Dogs by Ian Mcewan
Back in black
In the Undercity of Corvis, where mercenaries and criminals blur the lines between them, a ruthless crime lord has made a bold move to establish a stranglehold on Corvis' underworld and make it his own.When Canice Gormleigh becomes the target of a brutal foreign crime syndicate called the Black Dogs, Colbie Sterling and the rest of the Black River Irregulars are prepared to defend her. Yet what begins as a simple bodyguard assignment turns personal when the syndicate, led by the vengeful underboss Ivan Varnek and a strange mother-son duo, marks the Black River Irregulars as the sole remaining obstacle keeping the Black Dogs from taking over the Undercity.and then the city of Corvis itself. Where other underworld gangs have negotiated, surrendered, or fled from the Black Dogs, the Black River Irregulars will stand and die instead.
McEwan likes to take a particularly potent, decisive event bringing the protagonists together -- the snatching of a three-year-old girl in The Child In Time, a tragic ballooning incident at the start of Enduring Love-- and let the emotions develop from there. Atonementis his most deeply emotional book to date, and he is pleased that it turned out a moving love story; he has more often been seen as a master of the gruesome, the disturbing and the morbid after his early novels in the 1970's. His first collection of stories, First Love, Last Rites, was published in 1975 and immediately won him the nickname Ian Macabre. The sense of menace is present from the beginning of his latest novel, and darkness continues through the 1940 sections, but there is a warmth not usually associated with McEwan's work. At my age, he says, there is an obligation to celebrate the good things in life.
He found his own way towards a love of fiction; there weren't many books at home when he was growing up. His father was an Army NCO, and the family moved from London at times to North Germany, North Africa, and Singapore, where as a teenager he would find himself engrossed in novels by Iris Murdoch and Graham Greene. Attending a state-run boarding school, he was the first in his family to get a university education; he was also the first applicant to the creative writing course run by Malcolm Bradbury and Angus Wilson at the University of East Anglia. Now in his mid-fifties, he has published nine novels and two books of short stories. He lives in Oxford with his two sons.
His father, who died in 1996, was a dispatch rider with the Highland Light Infantry and was wounded by shrapnel in both legs during the retreat from Dunkirk; McEwan always knew he would write about it, and he is sorry he wasn't able to show this novel to his father, who became obsessed with his experiences at Dunkirk in his last years. He found another man wounded in both arms and together they managed to ride a Harley-Davidson to safety. The author's mother, who worked as a cleaning lady, is also present in places in the book; she suffers from vascular dementia, a disease that erases the memory, which afflicts Briony late in life.
McEwan feels Briony is the best fictional character he has created yet. Her mistake in telling a lie is the turning point that pulls her from the childhood world of innocence, a theme he has often touched upon. Her shaky claim provides a focus for the class prejudices of her elders, and becomes destructive. I was haunted by the witch-hunts of the recovered memory syndrome in the Eighties and Nineties. Children were prompted by leading questions from earnest social workers and court officials. The situation he created allowed him to address this in an oblique way.
Atonementis about storytelling, and the dangers of applying fictional form to real life, of imposing order and drama on life's confusions; as the Financial Times put it, the power of narrative to create and manipulate truth. If McEwan likes to play with perspective and describe the same experience from several points of view, this is partly because he feels novels are about showing the possibility of what it is like to be someone else. Unlike any other form of art, novels give us the opportunity to get inside someone else's head and try to understand them. Other people are as alive as you are. Cruelty is a failure of imagination.
SKU | CIN0385494327G |
ISBN 13 | 9780385494328 |
ISBN 10 | 0385494327 |
Title | Black Dogs |
Author | Ian Mcewan |
Condition | Good |
Binding Type | Paperback |
Publisher | Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc |
Year published | 1998-12-29 |
Number of pages | 176 |
Prizes | Short-listed for Booker Prize 1992 |
Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
Note | This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us |