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Everyday stuff

McEwan’s epistemological novel
by
November 2025, no. 481

What We Can Know by Ian McEwan

Jonathan Cape, $34.99 pb, 301 pp

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Everyday stuff

McEwan’s epistemological novel
by
November 2025, no. 481

A university librarian mentioned in a recent conversation how a famous writer had sold his computer hard drive to an American archive without realising this could give future researchers a record of not only his emails but all the internet sites he had ever visited. Ian McEwan was not the author in question, but it is precisely such issues that frame the narrative of his latest novel: the first part is set a hundred years from now, while the second section consists of a fictional journal set in our own recent past. As the novel’s title suggests, a key concern here is epistemology – how lived human experience differs from knowledge in forms of representation and rationalisation.

Tom Metcalfe, a scholar working in the year 2119 at the University of the South Downs and an expert on literature written between 1990 and 2030, is able to easily access information in digital form about the famous poet Francis Blundy, who died in 2017. Metcalfe says he would like to shout advice to ‘the people of a hundred years ago: if you want your secrets kept, whisper them into the ear of your dearest, most trusted friend. Do not trust the keyboard and screen. If you do, we’ll know everything.’

What We Can Know

What We Can Know

by Ian McEwan

Jonathan Cape, $34.99 pb, 301 pp

Buy this book

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

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