What We Can Know

eBook, 320 pages

Published by Knopf.

ISBN:
978-0-593-80473-5
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A slow devastation

The most fascinating aspect of this novel is the way the narrator in the first part explores the past —our present— dissecting our societies, our complacency, our selfishness, in a striking but not unkind way. The future imagined by the author takes place after the catastrophes, in a much reduced and difficult world, but not the post-apocalyptic setting that's become so boring and cliche, and by framing it this way, McEwan is able to question a lot. Yet, the fundamental question is in the title, what can we know? And what can we do with that?

Weird read

I enjoyed the premise of this book - being set 100 years in the future in which we are history being studied.

It was difficult to read, being split into two parts. It covers themes of how much can we really expect to know about each other, and history. Even our memories day to day are unreliable and affected by emotion and preconceptions.

The stand out message for me was how well do we really understand those we would claim to. How have we misread others and how will we be misread outselves.

It's quite a slow book in my opinion, and you would need to be OK with not having every question answered (indeed, that's probably the point)