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Ian McEwan

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Ian McEwan
Paris, 2011
Paris, 2011
BornIan Russell McEwan
(1948-06-21)21 June 1948(age 76)
Aldershot,England,UK
OccupationAuthor, screenwriter
NationalityBritish
Period1975–present
GenreRecent history
SpousePenny Allen
(m. 1982–1995,divorced)
Annalena McAfee (m. 1997–)
Website
www.ianmcewan

Ian Russell McEwan[1]CH,CBE,FRSA,FRSL(born 21 June 1948), is anEnglishnovelist(who is also called "Ian Macabre" because of the type of his early work).

Biography[change|change source]

McEwan was born inAldershot,Hampshire,Englandand spent much of his childhood in the Far East, Germany and North Africa where his father, an officer in the army, was posted. He was educated at theUniversity of Sussexand theUniversity of East Anglia,where he was the first graduate ofMalcolm Bradbury's pioneeringcreative writingcourse.

He has been married twice. His second wife,Annalena McAfee,is the editor of the Guardian's Review section.

In March and April 2004, just months after theBritishgovernment had invited him to a dinner withFirst Lady of the United StatesLaura Bush,McEwan was denied entry into theUnited Statesby theUnited States Department of Homeland Securityfor not having the proper visa for earning a living (McEwan was preparing to give a series of paid lectures). Only after several days and publicity in the British press was McEwan admitted because, as he said a customs official had told him, "We still do not want to let you in, but this is attracting a lot of unfavourable publicity."

He is a Fellow of theRoyal Society of Literature,a Fellow of theRoyal Society of Arts,and a Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences.He was awarded theShakespeare Prizeby the Alfred Toepfer Foundation, Hamburg, in 1999. He was awarded aCBEin 2000.

Works[change|change source]

His first published work was the collection of short storiesFirst Love, Last Rites(1975), which won theSomerset Maugham Awardin 1976.

The Cement Garden(1978) andBlack Dogs(1992) were his early novels.

His 1997 novel,Enduring Love,about a person withde Clerambault's syndrome,is regarded by many as a masterpiece, thoughAtonementhas received equally high acclaim.

In 1998, he was controversially awarded theBooker Prizefor hisnovella,Amsterdam.

His 2005 novel,Saturday,follows an especially eventful day in the life of aneurosurgeon.Mr Henry Perowne, the main character, lives in a house on a square in central London where McEwan himself lives after relocating from Oxford.

The 2007 novel,On Chesil Beach,was a short novel about one couple in England and how they experience love and sexuality in the early 1960s. The novel was on the short list of possible Booker Prize winners.

His most recent novel,Solar,is a comedy. A fictionalNobel Prizewinning physicist with a disorganized personal life is the main character.

Bibliography[change|change source]

Novels[change|change source]

Short fiction collections[change|change source]

Children's fiction[change|change source]

Plays[change|change source]

Screenplays[change|change source]

Oration[change|change source]

Introduction[change|change source]

References[change|change source]

  1. "Ian McEwan Biography (1948-)".

Other websites[change|change source]