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Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro





Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

The film is set, like 1984 and Terry Gilliam’s Brazil, in a creepily retro alternative Britain. Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro ( Faber & Faber, pb, 304pp, €9.Never Let Me Go location: ‘Hailsham House’ school: Ham House, Richmond Beautifully written and highly recommended. This is a story of friendship, love, the loss of innocence and the value and fragility of memory. As she learns more of her destiny and that of friends, the impossibility of a life she can call her own becomes more apparent and the true horror of the wider world into which she is propelled dawns with devastating clarity. Kathy H attends Hailsham School, an establishment with all the trappings of a high brow public school, where she is educated in the arts and the finer things in life.

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

The story concerns the childhood of Kathy H and her growth into a blighted adulthood in an alternate 1990s England (Ishiguro wisely chooses an alternate 1990s in which to set his story as scientific advances in the last ten to fifteen years would rule out his setting the story in the actual 1990s or the present day). It’s probably an open secret by now what the book is about, but I’ll avoid reference to the basic premise just in case anyone out there is unfamiliar with it. Clarke Award (it lost out to a novel by Geoff Ryman). It’s also interesting to observe that Ishiguro was plainly happy to have the book considered as SF, unlike more, shall we say, precious writers like Margaret Atwood (whose body of work includes many SF books) he was present at the awards ceremony when Never Let Me Go was shortlisted for an Arthur C. This has developed into a trend in recent years, with several literary novelists dipping into SF for their ideas: Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham, The Possibility of an Island by Michel Houellebecq, Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell, Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami, and others. I was also intrigued by the premise, which utilises a major science fiction trope in a literary manner. I’d been meaning to read this novel for some years, having thoroughly enjoyed The Remains of the Day.







Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro