First Love, Last Rites: Difference between revisions

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* "First Love, Last Rites"
* "First Love, Last Rites"
* "Disguises"
* "Disguises"

==Awards==
''First Love, Last Rites'' received the [[Somerset Maugham Award]] for 1976; coincidentally, McEwan's friend<ref>"Martin Amis and friends," ''The Daily Beast", February 16, 2009</ref><ref>Ian McEwan, "Martin Amis is Not A Racist," ''The Guardian'', November 21, 2007. (McEwan explains, "I've known Martin Amis for almost 35 years.")</ref> [[Martin Amis]] had been the previous author to receive the award.


==Film adaptations==
==Film adaptations==

Revision as of 21:54, 14 June 2011

First edition cover, artist Bill Botten

First Love, Last Rites is a collection of short stories by Ian McEwan. It was first published in 1975 by Jonathan Cape and re-issued in 1997 by Vintage.

Context

The collection is McEwan's first published work and was regarded by the author (along with his second collection of short stories, In Between the Sheets) as an opportunity to experiment and find his voice as a writer. In an interview with Christopher Ricks in 1979, McEwan commented, "They were a kind of laboratory for me. They allowed me to try out different things, to discover myself as a writer." As a piece of work that portrays McEwan, the writer, at his youngest, it is perhaps fitting that the dominant theme is that of adolescence, of the blurry and perilous divide between childhood and adulthood; in addition themes of sex, perversion, and the grotesque in its many forms feature throughout.

Stories

The book is composed of eight short stories, with the title story coming seventh:

  • "Homemade"
  • "Solid Geometry"
  • "Last Day of Summer"
  • "Cocker at the Theatre"
  • "Butterflies"
  • "Conversation with a Cupboard Man"
  • "First Love, Last Rites"
  • "Disguises"

Awards

First Love, Last Rites received the Somerset Maugham Award for 1976; coincidentally, McEwan's friend[1][2] Martin Amis had been the previous author to receive the award.

Film adaptations

The title story was adapted for a 1997 film of the same name. The film stars Natasha Gregson Wagner as Sissel and Giovanni Ribisi as Joey. It was directed by Jesse Peretz.

"Butterflies" has been adapted twice for cinema. In 1988 by Wolfgang Becker under the German title Schmetterlinge and in 2005 by Max Jacoby under its original English title.

"Solid Geometry" was also adapted by Channel 4 in 2002. This short film adaptation was directed by Denis Lawson and stars Ewan McGregor as Phil and Ruth Millar as Maisie

References

  • Ryan, Kiernan: Writers and their Work: Ian McEwan (1994, Northcote House)
  1. ^ "Martin Amis and friends," The Daily Beast", February 16, 2009
  2. ^ Ian McEwan, "Martin Amis is Not A Racist," The Guardian, November 21, 2007. (McEwan explains, "I've known Martin Amis for almost 35 years.")