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Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro Camilla Send a noteboard - 04/04/2011 09:36:13 PM
There is something about Kazuo Ishiguro. I do not know any other authors whose prose flows so easily while being so complex. It is very seductive. I knew this from other books he had written, and yet Never Let Me Go was a book I was hesitant about starting. The descriptions I had heard, the ``story of Kathy H., who works as a carer, and whose back story and memories of the school Hailsham form the main body of the narrative...'' never really caught my attention. I ought to have known Ishiguro would not write something mundane, banal or boring, but that is what it sounded like. And I have a high tolerance for books about ordinary people and their memories. That is my point.

I suspect these less than promising descriptions were due to a terror of spoiling the plot. I think that is a mistake. The story does not depend on one's ability to keep the true status of the residents of Hailsham a secret. I firmly believe most people will figure out what is going on very quickly. What matters, as I see it, is not that Ishiguro uses a common science fiction trope, but what he does with it. He grounds it in a way of narrating which does not accept it as science fiction, and he goes on to set up a very unpleasant scenario which asks the reader to think about how we define being human. Hiding this behind vague suggestions which portray Kathy H. as simply some sort of nurse with a private school upbringing is doing the book a disservice. Especially if it keeps people from reading it.

The point is not what they are, but that the trials and tribulations that are portrayed as their particular problem, as a result of their cruel fate, are in fact only compressed versions of general human concerns (or, possibly, quite the contrary: an indication that there is no such thing as the ``general human'', and that ``our'' problems are deeply personal and unique). What makes Kathy H. (and her schoolfellows) human is not their ability to create, their art, but their particularity as unique individuals with a sense of fate, and a desire to fend of the end in order to purchase time with those they love. At the same time it confronts readers with the question of how far we are willing to go in order to ward off that end. These are not the only questions asked, but they are perhaps at the core of the enterprise.

The narrative focuses on Kathy's particular segment of society. Within it, she belongs to privilege. The surrounding society is only hinted at, but the suggestions are perhaps more effective than the meticulous "world building" which characterises books one might more comfortably designate as "science fiction". The world here is that of an individual, as experienced; it is not an objective reality in which people live.

Ishiguro is always lovely, and his narrators are given the courtesy of an individual voice. That of Kathy H. is a resigned, peaceful one with undercurrents of passion and loss. Sometimes too peaceful and resigned, perhaps. The narrative is structured as a series of memories, told and explained for the benefit of a reader who is not of our society/time, but that of Kathy's. As such, it functions as a vindication of her soul, her individuality. It sets out the price being paid for it. Subtly.

It is a very good book. It should be read.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
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Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - 04/04/2011 09:36:13 PM 8175 Views
Re: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - 05/04/2011 01:15:04 AM 1616 Views
Re: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - 05/04/2011 09:50:42 AM 1535 Views
I was very impressed with it - 05/04/2011 02:17:10 PM 1557 Views
Yes - 05/04/2011 03:47:07 PM 1737 Views
That book is one I think about more than any I have read in a long while. - 05/04/2011 11:01:58 PM 1549 Views
I agree - 05/04/2011 11:15:22 PM 1589 Views
I am very pleased you liked this. - 06/04/2011 11:22:40 PM 1614 Views
Re: I am very pleased you liked this. - 06/04/2011 11:49:41 PM 1587 Views
Another thing (on my hesitating) - 07/04/2011 10:08:21 AM 1541 Views
You really should've known Ishiguro is worth more than that, though. - 07/04/2011 08:02:10 PM 1604 Views
I should have. And in the end I did. That is why I picked it up. - 07/04/2011 08:14:16 PM 1544 Views
I thought it was outstanding - 08/04/2011 08:18:05 PM 1534 Views
Re: I thought it was outstanding - 12/04/2011 07:50:00 AM 1541 Views
Re: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - 11/04/2011 03:15:54 AM 1595 Views
Re: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro - 12/04/2011 07:48:35 AM 1571 Views
thinks of puns based on the title - 24/04/2011 11:26:48 PM 1609 Views
I had the same reaction to Ruth - 27/04/2011 08:55:06 AM 1536 Views
Re: I had the same reaction to Ruth - 27/04/2011 04:18:01 PM 1636 Views
I think... - 27/04/2011 05:46:38 PM 1903 Views
Very true. *NM* - 28/04/2011 10:00:21 AM 753 Views

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