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3.9

Summary

Amsterdam - Ian McEwan
UJJWAL GOEL@gujjwal328
Nov 11, 2016 01:11 AM, 2971 Views
Amsterdam - Ian McEwan

Plot[edit]


The book begins with the funeral of artist Molly Lane. Guests at the funeral include British Foreign Secretary Julian Garmony, newspaper editor Vernon Halliday, and composer Clive Linley. The three share certain attributes: each has a very high opinion of himself, each was at some time Molly’s lover, and each regards the dead woman’s husband, George, with a mixture of amusement and contempt.


Clive and Vernon muse upon Molly’s death. It seems she had some kind of rapid-onset brain disease(not specified) that left her helpless and mad. Neither man can understand her attraction to Julian Garmony, the right-wing Foreign Secretary who is about to challenge his party’s leadership.


Clive returns home to continue work on a symphony he has been commissioned to write for the forthcoming millennium. Much of the work is complete, save the crucial signature melody. He resolves to go walking in the Lake District, as this tends to inspire him.


Vernon is the editor of a newspaper whose readership is diminishing. He is trying to change the content of the paper to be more sensationalist. George, Molly’s husband, gives him a golden opportunity, but he and Clive argue furiously about the moral responsibility of the act.


In the Lake District, Clive faces a difficult moral decision himself. He chooses to walk away from a potentially dangerous situation he could have helped with, because his elusive melody, the crucial notes, have arisen and he has to get them down. Instead of helping, he crouches unseen besides a rock and writes his music.


During the course of the book Clive and Vernon become mortal enemies bent on exacting revenge. The consequences of their decisions, and a pact made between them, lead them both to Amsterdam where the novel’s dénouement plays out.

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