Sunday, 31 January 2016

The Innocent - post-war Berlin

Leonard Marnham (The Innocent) is an employee of the Post Office who is shipped out to West Berlin shortly after the second world war. He is excited to be away from his hum drum existence back in Britain and finds his new surroundings strangely exciting, despite the bomb damage. He is put to work on a joint US/British task force to tap a specific Soviet communication line. His guide to the work and to Berlin is Bob Glass, an American extrovert who is hot on security, but also likes to have a good time. When Leonard falls in love with an attractive German girl, he thinks that life can't get any better ... but of course, things don't last. There are too many recent wounds and people cannot let them go. This is part spy story and part love story. The reader is taken on a journey with Leonard as his innocence is slowly but surely stripped away, and you are never sure whether he will ever recover this. It took me quite a while to get into this book, but I'm not sure why. It is well written and feels well researched. The writing is tight and some of the descriptions, particularly of the state of the apartments, really evokes the sense of time and place. I think I just didn't connect with the main character for some reason, but I'm sure that that is just me. Ian McEwan rarely lets the reader down, and this is no exception, and this novel left me joining in Leonard's feelings of  bewilderment and unease and there are parts that seem to be staying with me, which is usually a good sign! Not always a comfortable read, it is still worth the effort.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 245 print pages.
Price I paid: £1 from second hand shop.
Formats: print; unabridged audio cassette; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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