Ian McEwan
Ian McEwan (born June 21, 1948, Aldershot, England) is a British novelist, short-story writer, and screenwriter known for his restrained prose, dark humor, and perverse subject matter, earning him the early nickname 'Ian Macabre' for works like *The Cement Garden* (1978).[1][2] He gained critical acclaim with novels such as the Booker Prize-winning *Amsterdam* (1998) and *Atonement* (2001), transitioning from sparse Gothic stories to broader themes in later works.[1][2][3] McEwan has received numerous awards, including the Somerset Maugham Award (1976), Whitbread Novel of the Year (1987), and Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2000.[1][2][4]
Literary Fiction
Psychological Fiction
Atonement
Nutshell: A Novel
Nutshell
Nutshell: A Novel
Nutshell: A Novel
The Innocent: A Novel
Atonement: A Novel
The Children Act
The Children Act
Atonement: A Novel
The Children Act
Saturday
Lessons: A novel
Sweet Tooth: A Novel
In Between the Sheets: Story Collection
Sweet Tooth: A Novel
On Chesil Beach
Amsterdam: A Novel
Enduring Love: A Novel
What We Can Know: A Novel
Solar
First Love, Last Rites
The Children Act
The Daydreamer