
Member Reviews

Ian McEwan is one my favorite English novelists. His first four works of fiction in the late 1970s to 1981 were exclusively subjective narratives focused on the inner lives of his characters. That all changed after a gap of six years when he published his fifth work, his third novel, "The Child in Time." In it the private life of the protagonist (who's in search of his childhood) becomes entangled with the British political scene of the 1980s and sits on a government committee on childcare. From this moment onward all of McEwan's novels have situated the personal within the context of the political. "Atonement," my favorite of his novels, parallels the privileged life of Briony, the major character, with the privileged British upper class that leads the country from a delusional pre-war assurance through the horrors of the Dunkirk evacuation to the country's diminished postwar existence.
True to form, Ian McEwan's latest novel, "Lessons" firmly situates the life of its protagonist, Roland Baines against Europe in the final years of the Cold War, his presence during the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, ending with his experiencing the isolating effects of Covid. By now, if anything, the political seems to determine the trajectory of the personal lives of the book's characters. One effect of this emphasis on the pressure that the external world brings to bear on the personal life of Roland is to make things that happen to him feel arbitrary. He starts off in his childhood as a promising classical pianist, progresses to becoming a tennis coach and simultaneously is an aspiring poet. These very different professions fail to cohere in the book's major character, Ultimately the movement towards authoritarianism in world politics leaves Roland feeling that his life has amounted to little of significance.
The book starts so promisingly with Roland's bewildering fantasmagoria of memories and dreams that show McEwan writing at the height of his powers. His memories are of his music teacher at school with whom he has an affair that ends with his renunciation of his music career. Next comes love, marriage , a son, and his wife's sudden departure to become a leading German novelist of her generation. Later he marries again only to face the immediate loss of his new wife. His life seems to be dictated by the lives of others as much as it is by the events of world history. The result is a fractured character, someone who fails to cohere believably. Following Roland is like watching a paper boat being whirled down a river in flood with no power to control what happens to it.
I guess I'm admitting to a sense of disappointment with this novel. It doesn't change my mind about McEwan's stature. He's still a writer I admire for his imagination and ability to use language creatively. Maybe readers should read the novel and decide for themselves how well it works.

I loved this new book By Ian McEwan as much as all of his other novels. Lessons is an all-encompassing story of Roland Baines's life from childhood in Tripoli to aging in London. Roland started life in overseas locations where his dad was in the military. When Roland got to proper school age, he was forced to attend a government-run boarding school in England. Naturally, his days there were a misery and he missed his much-loved mother and the love only she gave to the young boy.
In this sweeping life novel, McEwan manages, as always, to give us global history and current politics, from the Suez Canal crisis, the Bay of Pigs debacle, and the election of Trump along with a pandemic of COVID. Throughout the setbacks on the world stage, Roland managed to find love and seemed always to have a woman to fulfill his intimacy needs. Roland is at times, likable, and other times pathetic. McEwant manages to give us a story of ourselves, the deep secrets we care not to divulge. I loved this long novel and appreciate McEwan taking me up to current times in the age group I fit into today. I know I sound like a fan girl, but I guess I have always been one when it comes to McEwan novels.
Thank you very much to NetGalley and the publisher for this ARC.

Lessons, by Ian McEwan, focuses on the life of one main character, Roland. From the time of his childhood through older adulthood the author develops the character revealing how events within his lifetime form his relationships, opinions, actions and reactions. The lessons he learns aid him in surviving the ups and downs of life, in both healthy and unhealthy ways. #Lessons #NetGalley

Over the years , I’ve had a love/ hate relationship with the author. When good-superb, but also at least for me several “ mehs”.
This I thought a masterpiece. Character driven-the life of Roland Baines, a man of my age, and the events in his life that have shaped him, for good and bad.He uses historical events as the background for his life-the Suez canal crisis, Bay of Pigs, life in East Germany and the fall of the wall, etc . concluding with Brexit and Covid.
It’s long, at times I thought overwritten, but with moments (for someone of the same age) of absolute unbridled joy accompanied by moments and events that bring a tear to the eyes.
I thoroughly enjoyed this read- a book club selection for sure!!!!!

A sweeping, epic saga that spans multiple generations and delivers a sense of familiarity in its historical narrative and – the essence of the tale – its life lessons. Meticulously written with a level of prose many writers aspire to but seldom reach. McEwan really is a master storyteller.
My thanks to NetGalley and Knopf Doubleday for granting this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.

McEwan is one of my favorite authors, and this novel truly stands above his previous works. The characters think and act like such believable humans, I felt almost transported into the novel, only to miss them once I turned the last page on my Kindle and set it down.

I have enjoyed Ian McEwan's novels in the past and requested this one because of that history. Unfortunately, after many days of reading, I just have been unable to connect with this character and his story and am not finishing this novel.

It took me days to get to 24% and I still did not like the protagonist. It dragged on while focusing on some uncomfortable moments. I like this author but this book was not for me. I wanted to like it. It just was not going to happen.
This ARC was provided to me via NetGalley. Opinions expresses are completely my own.

Thank you to NetGalley for this advanced copy. We follow Roland through his life from a 14 year old boy at a boarding school to a 70 year old man who is looking back on his life. It's a story of how we are shaped by what is happening around us both intimately and what is going on in the world. Roland is abused as a 14 year old boy by a teacher and this shapes how he loves. His wife leaves him and their baby boy unexpectedly and he is left to raise this boy on his own. She goes off to pursue her writing career not wanting to become her mother who stayed and resented her daughter for ending her writing ambition.
This is a hard one to review. I loved Roland's storyline throughout his 70 years. I did get lost in the historical storylines weaving back and forth throughout.

It's an age old question on whether a writer needs to even embellish a story about a perfectly ordinary person and a (mostly) perfectly ordinary life--shouldn't how we live and go through the world be interesting enough? At least we mat think so about our own lives. In "Lessons", Ian McEwan follows a family, and more specifically a young boy, Roland, born during the 1940s in England, and basically his journey through life. He has some potentially somewhat unusual occurrences (affair with a piano teacher at a young age, short marriage to a future major writer), but generally it's an ordinary life. This gives the author space to judge and expound on many issues, including our current day situation of war, pandemic, climate change, and numerous other topics. Sometimes too much at length. Unfortunately, there is no there, there. No conclusions are drawn, no plot devices followed. It's a perfectly modern story in our imperfectly modern times. I couldn't give away spoilers if I wanted to give them away. He's born, things happen, he goes on. The devil is in the details, I suppose, as well as a more interesting story. We all know a Roland, his friends, lovers, family--each is portrayed in a very realistic archetype. But is that what we want to read about?

I love McEwan's writing and his latest book does not disappoint. I was drawn into the at times uncomfortable story from the opening pages. Okay, maybe it is more than at times uncomfortable... I was uncomfortable for Roland for much of the story.
Dear Roland.
We meet Roland in an awkward moment, his wife has abruptly left him and their child - Lawrence, who is a frequently crying baby. And the story then goes back a decade or so to an 11 year old Roland heading to boarding school. And the story progresses from Roland's memories. The memories are what provide the most discomfort, as Roland is sexually abused by a teacher at the boarding school. This abuse happens over a long period of time. There is no way this abuse would not have an impact on a person, and this baggage Roland carries with him for the remainder of his life.
McEwan anchors us into the story with the historical timeline. We experience the Bay of Pigs, a divided Germany, Thatcher policies, Brexit, and yes, even COVID. The story is well written and so engaging. I cheered for Roland... I wanted him to step away from his baggage. And when he begins to see what effect it has had on his life and make a new path forward... it is exhilarating!
If you likeMcEwan, you will love Lessons! I highly recommend!
I am grateful for the digital ARC of this book that I received from Knopf and NetGalley in return for my honest review.

Ian McEwan’s “Lessons” is a lengthy historical and literary novel set in England and Germany during the period beginning with the post-WWII years and ending with the pandemic. It chronicles the life of Roland Baines and his relationships with the three most important women in his life: the older piano teacher who becomes obsessed with him when he’s 11 and begins a two-year affair with him when he’s 14; his first wife who deserts him and their newborn son to become Germany’s most celebrated novelist; and his second wife who discovers she has terminal cancer the day after they decide to marry. Along the way, Baines experiences and is impacted by various historical events including the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Berlin Wall, the fall of the Soviet Union, the reunification of Germany, England’s shifting political sands, the rise of nationalism, Brexit, and Covid-19.
My reaction to the novel was initially mixed but, on the whole, favorable. I thought the beginning difficult, particularly since it shifts a lot between time periods; and because Roland initially seems not very admirable, or even likable. While he has many talents—one of them extraordinary—he seems to lack the passion and ambition to capitalize on those talents. And he’s not very honest, especially with himself.
But as the novel progressed, Roland grew on me and I found myself caring, quite a lot, about what happened to him and the people he cares about, especially his son.
If there’s a central message to the novel, it’s one that’s difficult for me to articulate. (I suspect that there will be a host of differing opinions as to what the central message is and, if so, I equally suspect that “Lessons” qualifies, and will be hailed, as art.) Nevertheless, it explores many themes, including sexual and spousal abuse, victimization versus personal responsibility, natural talent versus drive and ambition, choices and their consequences, “the road not taken,” family, abandonment, forgiveness, and reconciliation.
Far from being light entertainment, “Lessons” is a novel that will require thought and commitment from its readers. On balance, I’m very glad to have spent the time reading it.
My thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for providing me with an electronic ARC. The foregoing is my independent opinion.

I’m not sure this book is quite the full four stars for me but there were moments that really worked in this long sprawling novel about the life of one man, Roland Baines and the events, both personal and wider world, that affected his decisions and therefore the course of his life. A lot of the time I was just waiting for something more (I don’t know what) and I didn’t ever find it a chore to read but a lot of the peripheral characters and their stories would’ve made a far more interesting main character for a novel. I found myself wishing I could read the novels of Alissa Eberhardt, Roland’s wife who leaves him and their baby son to pursue her literary career or the story of her mother Jane or Daphne, Roland’s friend and later wife. The novel jumps about in time a bit but mostly it’s linear from Roland’s childhood in Libya, postwar to boarding school in England (where he is abused by his female piano teacher, a significant event that changes the course of his life and affects his relationships with women) to his marriage to Alissa, parenthood, friendships, relationships, to now and old age. It covers a lot and perhaps that’s why I’m finding it hard to review. The introduction describes it as a masterpiece, maybe but I wouldn’t call it that. I have been much more emotionally involved in other Mcewan novels, so was a bit disappointed with this one.

Ever since reading “Atonement” I have been McEwan fan and was pleased to be given the opportunity to read an ARC of “Lessons.” But, this book is a huge disappointment.
McEwan’s central character, Roland Baines, narrates his life including the two primary events. That of teenage sexual abuse by teacher which derails his adult life, and the desertion of his wife leaving him to raise his infant son alone. That’s it for plot, the rest of the nearly 500 pages are filled with Ronald’s memory of historical events and how these events impacted his life.
Being the same age as McEwan I remember most of these events and several had significant influences on my own life, but found reading about them to be a slog. The placement of Ronald in some of these events, such as the fall of the Berlin Wall, feel contrived to give the character more gravitas than he deserves. Unfortunately, McEwan brings nothing new to the discussion of these momentous historical happenings.
I pushed through reading the last 100 pages because I believe in reading an entire book before writing a review. The three star rating is generous. It is going to be interesting to read the professional critics opinion of “Lessons.”

Lessons, by Ian McEwan, is a brilliant novel replete with haunting storytelling and dazzling writing. Spanning decades of American history and global events, it is one boy's journey to self-discovery, love and eminent manhood. Life is difficult for Roland Baines, whom we meet at 11-years-old, and times are tough in the world around him. Through music, friends and literature, he manages to survive years of heartache, becoming a man on a mission when more unbelievable things happen to him in adulthood. Kudos to Mr. McEwan who expertly spins of tale of astonishing detail, taking the reader on the ride of a lifetime.

I received a digital ARC of this book from Knopf and NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Ian McEwan's latest opens with a scene that will prove to be an experience that will shape the rest of the main character's life. As a teenage boy, Roland Baines will be involved in an inappropriate sexual relationship with his much-older piano teacher. For the rest of his life, that pivotal moment will have an impact on his relationships with others and the choices he makes. We follow him for decades and watch how he weathers changes in politics, in his family, and in the world. The constant throughout his life is that illicit relationship; again and again he returns to it and questions whether he made an active decision to engage it in or if he was an innocent victim. He questions whether his life trajectory would have been different had it not happened. Like Schroedinger's cat, he ponders the simultaneous possible lives he could have led had he made different decisions at key moments.
This novel is vast in scope and skillfully written. As a reader, it challenges us to consider whether those moments we think of as defining and life-changing are really that.

Ian McEwan brings his masterly talents to the ambitious tale of a man's life--spanning decades and generations, as well as cataclysms (both large and small). Not quite as immersive as some of McEwan's earlier, hypnotic novels, LESSONS is an opportunity to appreciate McEwan's spectacular talent in crafting characters and in his incomparable prose.
Many thanks to Knopf Doubleday and to Netgalley for the opportunity and pleasure of an early read.

This book is an epic of one man's life spanning over 70 years. The novel spans one man’s lifetime from the 1950s to the 2020s. I struggled with this book. It had a very slow start and it didn't pick up pace in the middle where it was very much required. It was a very interesting expercience to read a book that was so different from the others I have read before. I was extremely surprised to read this. Such an incredible read. It was fun to read about his relationships and how his relationship with his piano teacher at the boarding school affected his future relationships. The main character grew up with parents who were in the army. He moved around so much that it may also have affected his behaviour. Overall, It was a nice read and I look forward to read it again.

Ian McEwan is an extremely talented writer. I really loved Atonement, Nutshell, the Children Act and Chesil Beach, less so with his others, as in his most recent novels, Machines Like Me or Sweet Tooth. However, as in all his novels, his use of prose is nothing less than masterful. I liked Lessons but didn’t love it. It was a very challenging read for over half the novel, but then seemed to pull me in more. The story spans over 70 years of the life of a man, Roland Baines, from World War II as a young boy to the present. Roland is obviously damaged through various experiences in his younger years, is a drifter, but yet the novel also shows his resilience and difficult personal and professional struggles to the events in his life in raising his son single-handedly and plowing ahead in spite of all the obstacles he faced. What McEwan did so successfully in this novel was chronicling Roland’s life, his personal tragedies, family and social life and the impacts on it by real life historical events, including the Iron Curtain, the Cuban Missile crisis, the collapse of the Berlin Wall, climate change, and the pandemic. Not to mention that his writing is simply beautiful and mesmerizing. His characters are the heart of this story and so well developed. A good tale but not riveting. Thank you to NetGalley for providing me an advance copy in exchange for a candid and unbiased review

A mightily insightful exploration of human experience. Roland Baines is a character I will carry with me for a long time.
The novel's opening starts off with a terribly unsettling suggestion of child abuse. Initially, I will say, this put me off a little. I read 'Cement Garden'' and although I thought it was a brilliant piece of writing, the incestuous relationship left me feeling uncomfortable - probably the point. I am pleased I continued with 'Lessons' because the novel became increasingly more enjoyable as Roland aged.
I really enjoyed the layered exploration of one man's life on top of the last hundred years of history. I thought it worked well. Roland's life was clearly in the foreground which I thought was an effective choice.
This is a powerful novel that explores dissatisfaction, joy, acceptance and sorrow with exceptional insight. The word 'masterpiece' has been used and I fully support that. Arguably, McEwan's best yet.
Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an ARC.