
What We Can Know
Author: Ian McEwan
Narrator: David Rintoul, Rachel Bavidge
Unabridged: 11 hr 37 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 09/23/2025
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Dystopian

Author: Ian McEwan
Narrator: David Rintoul, Rachel Bavidge
Unabridged: 11 hr 37 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Recorded Books
Published: 09/23/2025
Categories: Fiction, Literary Fiction, Dystopian
Ian McEwan is one of Britain's most celebrated contemporary novelists, acclaimed for his psychologically incisive storytelling and elegant prose. Since his literary debut in the 1970s, McEwan has earned international recognition for works that blend emotional intimacy with sharp social observation, from the unsettling early short stories of First Love, Last Rites to the Booker Prize–winning Amsterdam. His bestselling novels, including Atonement, Enduring Love, On Chesil Beach, and Machines Like Me, showcase his range—from historical drama to ethical thrillers to speculative fiction exploring the frontiers of science and morality.
Adapted frequently for stage and screen, McEwan's work continues to resonate with readers worldwide for its moral complexity, suspenseful plots, and unflinching look at love, guilt, and the human condition. Beyond fiction, he has also written screenplays, librettos, and essays on science, politics, and literature, reinforcing his place as one of the most versatile voices of his generation.
What We Can Know is a dystopia… Another bleak and satirical version of the future we have no wish to live in… We are carried a century ahead… After a radical climate change Great Britain turned into an archipelago… An academician arrives on the isle of Bodleian Snowdonia Library to perform quite a pe......more
Please, when I die, just place a copy of this book on my grave. That’s all I ask—thank you. The story is a brilliant meditation on how we treat history—how we glorify certain eras and idolize their people, obsessing over times we never lived through, often wishing we had. It exposes the absurdity of......more
For years, Ian McEwan was nominated for the Booker Prize so often that the judges kept him on speed dial. But then there came a moment — say around 2016 — when he published “Nutshell,” about a ruminative, vengeful fetus, and it felt like we might have lost McEwan to the kinds of weird little novels t......more
I’m clearly going to be the outlier here, and I’m perfectly fine with that. I just finished What We Can Know and I have mixed feelings. I flew through it, not because I was captivated, but because I wanted it to be over. It stirred up a lot of emotions, some good, but mostly bad. The book is split in......more
In his latest novel, Ian McEwan transports us to a dystopian world in the twenty second century. The novel is cleverly plotted, driven by literary obsessions and punctuated with murder and revenge. We are confronted with chimerical truths where facts are filtered through shifting prisms and emotions......more