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Never Let Me Go

od autora: Kazuo Ishiguro

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aliayova recenze

For any other writer, I might consider a four-star review, but considering that I've already read The Remains of the Day and When We Were Orphans, I failed to find this book as touching or moving.

Rather than altering a familiar universe through language, as Ishiguro did brilliantly in Remains and Orphans, he tends to rely more on sci-fi/fantasy tropes to pull him through. (Again, for another writer, I'd excuse it, but I know Ishiguro can do better). His narrator's relationship to her world is also somewhat unconvincing, as Ishiguro constructs her as both self-aware enough to tell an eloquent story and innocent to much that surrounds her. I also felt that the thrust of the story was a letdown-- the book is written in a way that makes you anticipate a grand finale, and I felt that finale never came.

I imagine that a high school student or a young adult looking for a "crossover" book might find it more valuable than I did. I also see from reading the reviews below me that everybody has a different take on where Ishiguro is at his "best." So this is one of those books you'll just have to read for yourself!
  aliay | Sep 20, 2009 |

All member reviews

Now this is an amazing book. Superbly crafted, achingly poignant, beautiful and ozzing with sophisticated simplicity.
Ishiguro guides you into this world with Kathy the narrator who reminisces about her time at Hailsham, her school, her friendships with Tommy and Ruth and the hauntingly realisation of her purpose in the world.
The book is divided into thirds. Her time at Hailsham, the immediate years after they leave and then probably 12 years after that.
It's a version of contemporary England but this isn't science fiction, it feels deeply real and engaging with the themes of loss of innocence and the fragility of life.
I couldn't put it down, mourned when I finsihed it and will be recommending it to lots of people.
Read it and love it. ( )
  withwill | Dec 11, 2009 |
The experience of reading "Never Let Me Go" happens to the reader in layers. There is the first and most obvious, the reveal of what this book is about -- the realization that occurs to the reader much in the same way it occurred, apparently, to the characters: we are told but not told. There is no hiding, no equivocation; it's all there from page one, but in such a way that it seeps in, never giving us or the characters a chance to react until it is too late.

There is also the layer of setting, and the way the author has managed to portray the school, Hailsham, so vividly. What we are brought into is so precisely the society that springs up, much like a virus, in any closed institutionalized setting. The social stratosphere, the cliques, the whispers, the way things are done and not done. The rules -- and not those imposed on the inhabitants, but the ones they make for themselves, as if somehow they have no choice but to institutionalize themselves even more stringently than is being done to them. Hailsham has all of this.

And then there is the layer of the characters themselves: Kathy, Ruth, Tommy, mostly, and Kathy most specifically of the three. Her thoughts, wants, loves and desires. And when we relate to her as a person, this is where all of those layers collide. Relating to Kathy, we are drawn into the world Ishiguro has created, that last final step -- and that world was already disturbingly familiar. ( )
2 hlasovat daisy32 | Dec 8, 2009 |
Slice of life in an alternate timeline? (Perhaps that's enough of a spoiler there.) The story, per the book synopsis, is simply about Kathy, as she meets up with a couple of old friends, and reminisces about their time in Hailsham, revealing to readers what it is that makes these people special. Everything is subtle and evenly-paced, so it may be slow moving for most people. I loved it, however, despite the fact that nothing too much really changed between the beginning and the end. It's about living and discovering... and gives food for thought. ( )
  lilasia | Dec 2, 2009 |
How does one that is born in Japan, although moved to England at the age of 6, manage to portray life (and death) at an English girls school? I was unaware when I started reading what the book was to be about and was a bit perplexed when I discovered what a "carer" really was. The booked did unnerve me in that I perhaps wanted an out where the “carer" would escape her fate. But what really amazed me is that I could not really believe how English it all was despite the Author's origin
  bergs47 | Nov 27, 2009 |
Ishiguro is a rare magician of a writer, whose prose is so deceptively simple and yet haunting. This book broke me and made me sob at the end. In a good way. ( )
  RachelWeaver | Nov 23, 2009 |
Beautifully written in a subtle way. The reader, much like the narrator, is told but not told of many events, terminology and other related things that happened within the book. It starts off with the narrator's childhood, yet not from the beginning of the childhood, via various important points in history that the narrator wishes us to know.

As we watch the narrator grow, we are quietly led towards a definite tragic ending, yet, we hope, much as the narrator would hope, for perhaps a more gentler ending.

Great piece of literature, love it! ( )
  anivyl | Nov 23, 2009 |
There is something dreamy and detached about Ishiguro's writing. It's somehow polite, understated and beautiful. This book has a sci-fi theme, but is also the tale of a group of childen growing up and coming to terms with their identity and future lives. Couldn't put this down, though I can't really explain quite why. I just found the writing very compelling and enjoyable to read. ( )
  Honto | Nov 22, 2009 |
2007 ( )
  katiemertz | Nov 20, 2009 |
Ishiguro is a rare magician of a writer, whose prose is so deceptively simple and yet haunting. This book broke me and made me sob at the end. In a good way. ( )
  RachelWeaver | Nov 20, 2009 |
Tucked away in the English countryside, the students of Halisham, a seemingly elite boarding school, live an almost idyllic life. As Kathy H. reminisces on the friendships and rivalries of her early life at Halisham, she also begins to touch on the strange and puzzling aspects of the school and her fellow students. For the students of Halisham are special in some undefined and unknowable way, and their futures are clouded and obscured from themselves and each other. Fed only the most basic information about their unusual lives and circumstances, they are reduced to living lives filled with rumor, conjecture and speculation amid the more typical everyday occurrences of childhood. As Kathy begins to unfold her curious tale that spans the unfathomable years of her adolescence, more and more curious facts about the children come to the surface, and eventually their bizarre fate is unmasked. Both lucid and frightening, Never Let Me Go takes its readers to the borders of an unimaginable world, where nothing is what it seems and peculiar things are hidden in plain view.

This is the kind of book that doesn't make its full impact until a few minutes after you have closed the cover. Written in lush but subdued prose, the narrative seems to unfold with a calmness and clarity that belies the book's true nature. From the outset, Ishiguro seems to be able to do something miraculous with this tale. He begins by describing some very commonplace events in the lives of a handful of students at Halisham, but peeking from beneath the more typical story he begins to interject random flashes of theme that seem almost disconnected and alien to the story itself. As more and more of the students' experiences are related it becomes clear that something "other" is going on, but with touches of brilliant technique, the readers of this story, like the characters themselves, are left on the precipice of understanding, splendidly misdirected into believing that things are just as they appear on the surface.

During the middle sections of the story, when both reader and character are just beginning to understand what is going on, a conversation occurs between the characters that documents just how much and in what ways the truths of their existence have been kept from them. In explaining it to each other, they come to conclude that they have been told, yet not told, about themselves, the facts being released to them at a time when it is almost impossible for them to understand them. Later, when these initial facts have set in, they become similar to ingrained truth and make the monstrous reality seem commonplace. It was at this point that I began to realize that this is exactly what was happening to the reader. It was the perfect specimen of art imitating life and it was one of the things that made the book so distinguished.

There were really two tales going on: the somewhat placid and serene tale of life as a Halisham student, full to the brim with the minutia of friendships, relationships and education, and the hidden and horrendous reality that was taking place underneath. Throughout the story it became clear by degrees what was really in store for these children, but I still found it both shocking and distressing when everything was finally brought to the surface in the last third of the book. Much of what was planned for them was spelled out in a direct way, but most of the horror of these discoveries was based on what was implied about what had been going on and its inevitable conclusion. The full story, once revealed, was extremely sad and I felt that Ishiguro was really able to capture the despondence and unfruitful hope that permeated these characters' lives. It was curious how detached they seemed to be, how resigned and accepting they were as they walked towards their destines. It was only later that I realized that they had no other basis for comparison and that the strange life they led was the only life they had ever known.

The characterization in this book was immaculate as well. Though the characters were meant to be somewhat indistinct, I found that they were all fully formed and that they were easy to identify with because they embodied the characteristics of people I have known throughout my life. That was one of the things that was so haunting about this book: I felt as though I knew these people in some way; one in particular reminded me of a friend I had long ago, so it was all the more disturbing to realize what was in store for them. To see their fate played out was frightening in a way that I tried not to examine too closely. I suppose the closeness I felt to the characters was in itself another of Ishiguro's deft manipulations, and that the book would have lost a lot of its impact if one were not so attuned to the characters' individuality and emotions.

I really loved this book for its intricacy and beautiful construction and think that its an excellent example of literary writing infused with just the right amount of psychological suspense. There is so much to explore within the constructs of this story, and in the end, the discussions that could be had about this book might be almost as complex as the book itself. I would definitely say that this is one of the better books I have read this year and that its subtlety and revelations were created with a master's touch. Reading this book was pleasurable, and in many ways, scary, but I am thankful that I have had the experience. A great read and highly recommended. I would love the chance to explore this book further and hear other's opinions, so if you have read it and would like to discuss it, please let me know! ( )
2 hlasovat zibilee | Nov 3, 2009 |
Incredible! I can't say I knew for sure where this was heading (no spoilers, don't worry), but even the inkling I had wasn't enough to ruin the ride for me. This is eery and captivating as often as it is charming; definitely one that makes you think.

I've loaned my copy out to all of my friends. It's definitely one that I recommend. ( )
1 hlasovat krysbrezinski | Oct 27, 2009 |
One of the most disturbingly quiet or quietly disturbing book I've ever read. The atmosphere and tone of the book provides a truly solid foundation for its plot. Despite being slow in parts, It raises so many ethical, moral and psychological questions that it left me unsettled and uneasy. Cloning for the purpose of harvesting organs? The acceptance destiny without struggle? Humanity judged on the basis of biological origin? It is a book of quiet desperation. A truely excellent book. ( )
  highbar | Oct 1, 2009 |
For any other writer, I might consider a four-star review, but considering that I've already read The Remains of the Day and When We Were Orphans, I failed to find this book as touching or moving.

Rather than altering a familiar universe through language, as Ishiguro did brilliantly in Remains and Orphans, he tends to rely more on sci-fi/fantasy tropes to pull him through. (Again, for another writer, I'd excuse it, but I know Ishiguro can do better). His narrator's relationship to her world is also somewhat unconvincing, as Ishiguro constructs her as both self-aware enough to tell an eloquent story and innocent to much that surrounds her. I also felt that the thrust of the story was a letdown-- the book is written in a way that makes you anticipate a grand finale, and I felt that finale never came.

I imagine that a high school student or a young adult looking for a "crossover" book might find it more valuable than I did. I also see from reading the reviews below me that everybody has a different take on where Ishiguro is at his "best." So this is one of those books you'll just have to read for yourself! ( )
  aliay | Sep 20, 2009 |
(spoilers)
I've read better clone stories. I guessed they were clones in the first chapter. I didn't find the friendships or the romances very convincing, and the bidability of the clones struckan off note for me. Syrely some of them would try and make a break for it, especially after tracking down Madam and finding out that there were no extensions. And why was the great hope for extension, and not for freedom? That is what I found creepy - the lack of initiative. ( )
  francescadefreitas | Sep 19, 2009 |
SPOILER ALERT.

I haven't finished this book yet but I want to talk about it anyway.

This is the first book by Ishiguro that I have read. I saw it and The Remains of the Day on the shelf. I wanted to pick a book by him that I had never heard anything about and that had no existing movie adaptations.

I first noticed the disqueting feeling of sensing a world similar to ours in many ways, but that has some very disturbing and strange differences from ours. These children are living in a boarding school like any other boarding school in England in the post-war era (with LP records and cassette tapes). But at the same time, there is some radical difference that is very difficult to put my finger on.

Then the author lets a few momentous details slip, particularly on pages 73, 127 and 152, where we learn that the children are organ donors with apparently no choice in the matter. And then to make it worse, I learn on page 161 that they are cloned.

There have of course been some disturbing stories recently about organ transplants without the consent of the donor, but this book is imagining a world where the whole existence of the donor is controlled from birth, and even before, i.e., by cloning. What a nightmare.

I am going to read the rest of the book and am afraid to see if Kathy and Ruth and Tommy are going to have some horendous Ian McEwan-esque horrors in the ending section.

I will add to this review, or add a second one, once I have finished the rest of the book.
  libraryhermit | Sep 13, 2009 |
Harrowing, heartbreaking and horrific, the more so for its low-key, almost emotionless delivery – although I am much of the opinion that it is merely 'The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas' in a shiny new hat (but Le Guin used fewer words to make the same point, and wasn't afraid to call it science fiction). ( )
  phoebesmum | Aug 31, 2009 |
I rate this somewhere between the perfect The Remains of the Day and the less satisfying When we were Orphans to which I granted a grudging 'well, okay'. This is speculative fiction at its subtlest and most insidious. In the midst of the relationships and history of the residents of 'Hailsham', a seemingly idyllic boarding school, it is almost possible to overlook the alternate reality to which these children are bespoke. The science-fiction fan in me would have liked a little more information, but there's no doubt that the strength of this book is it's speculation, rumour, and the suspense that they build. The perfectly presented reminiscences of the narrator as she looks back at her schoolgirl years and their consequences for her sense of identity are what bring the reader insight and a sense of creeping injustice. ( )
  trishtrash | Aug 19, 2009 |
This book was so moving and yet so sincere, its hard to say that it didn't touch me from the word go.
Its not a tear-jerker, and neither is it a heart thumper, and yet as the book nears its end, I find it increasingly hard to say goodbye,
The stories of Hailsham, the friendship of Tommy, Ruth and Kath, all resound with a lot of meaning and yet one wonders throughout most of part one.
Hailsham is different, but how? How is it not like other "normal" schools? What makes the alumni of Hailsham so different?

Kazuo's revelation of all these questions is like peeling an onion, Layer by layer. Through anecdotes and stories, the reader is exposed to a harsh truth, a one that may yet come true.

It is a definite portrayal of Human behaviours and questions the very foundations of our knowledge about the existence of a soul. ( )
  mariebubblyster | Aug 11, 2009 |
SPOILER ALERT (Please note the irony) -- Some have wondered why the clones don't rebel against their fate, or at least simply walk away from their destiny. My take on this: Ishiguro has written an extended parable concerning the fate 99.9% of all living persons share. Granted, we're not all engendered to donate organs to the wealthy, but we are all bred to serve a system that rewards those at the very tippy top of the economic pyramid. (How brilliant is the fact that not one of the benefciaries of the system ever appears in the novel, just as they never appear in the lives of us real people.) Some few of us, like the pupils at Hailsham, are brought up with the illusion that our education, talents, emotional experiences, etc. have some sort of value in the larger scheme. By the time we hang up our spurs, we know different. Most living souls (from the third world to the first) only struggle to achieve that flimsy illusion, if they haven't simply had the common sense to accept early on the fact that their lives are futile.

Watching a young girl dancing by herself in a dream of romantic love and fulfilment is a heartbreaking experience to anyone who knows what her future inevitably looks like. I find it heartening to hear about the large number of school children who simply decide to *bleep* the future and get whatever they can out of what's on offer right now.

The fact that most of us haven't made that choice and have decided to plod, plod, plod along like stupid dray horses, is the answer to the question why the characters in this novel don't pull some sort of "Logan's Run". ( )
5 hlasovat jburlinson | Jul 19, 2009 |
There are a lot of really spoiler-y book reviews out there for Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go. I was spoiled for this book and still thought it was incredibly powerful, but I think it would be even better to not know.

This is an incredibly powerful book. I found it to be very moving and sad, but in a very subtle way. This isn't a weepy book, where I need to carry a box of Kleenex around with me while I read. Instead, I felt like a blanket of sadness was being pulled onto me, as I gradually realized the magnitude of Kathy's story. When the book was done, I put it down and sat quietly for a while, just absorbing what I'd read, and in the days since, I've thought about it several times.

http://archthinking.blogspot.com/2009... ( )
  lorin77 | Jul 6, 2009 |
didn't finish the book. just couldn't grasp the idea of children being raised for the sole purpose of donating thier organs. ( )
1 hlasovat amanaceerdh | Jul 5, 2009 |
The title may seem odd at first, but as Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go unfurls its scrupulously guarded secrets, one comes to realise just how appropriate it is. Softly, subtly, the writing insinuates itself into the reader's mind, where it becomes something far greater than the sum of its quiet memories and musings. It is not until one sets Kathy's tale aside for a moment that one begins to appreciate the essence of this exquisite novel – and with this inevitable reflection comes the awareness that Never Let Me Go has indeed clung, with silent tenacity, to the innermost depths of the mind. Through every paragraph of every chapter, Ishiguro considers the input of his reader, and constructs his prose accordingly, exercising the utmost control. He considers how we will react, what we will feel, and how complete a picture of his world we will build from the information that he has given us. As though communicating on a subconscious level, he is able to plant knowledge, emotion and understanding without overtly communicating any of these things. Through subtle implication, repetition, withholding of information and a constant repression of the truth, this novel delivers a lingering and ultimately heartbreaking impact.

Though all the stages of life are dealt with in turn, it is the deconstruction of Ishiguro's characters, and therefore the deconstruction of the human mind itself, that forms the heart of this novel. The subject matter may lean towards science fiction, but the author's approach refuses to follow; the humanity of his protagonists is never called into question for a moment. They are simply too real for that. Such is the perceptiveness and complexity with which he brings them to life that all of us will find something of ourselves in them, and ultimately feel the atrocity of the wrong done to them with profound intensity.

Indeed, it is perhaps Ishiguro's refusal to examine the mechanics of his scenario – his persistent focus on its human, emotional aspects – that make the novel so universally engaging. It is a study of humanity that seems, itself, to be human; a portrait of repression that is, itself, repressed; a tale of careful avoidance that carefully avoids its own ideas. It is a novel realised through memories and feelings that is utterly memorable and heartfelt – and, as the title promises, its resonating after-effects will never quite let you go. ( )
2 hlasovat SamuelW | Jun 30, 2009 |
Highly thought provoking. Our book group had a long and at times heated discussion about this one. Takes a while to warm up but once you're in you can't put it down. ( )
1 hlasovat alisonmc | Jun 16, 2009 |
(#8 in the 2009 Book Challenge)

This is a book for work book club, and I didn't think I was going to especially like it and I ended up devouring it in one sitting almost. I'm usually not particularly fond of dystopian fiction because, I don't know, I feel like there's enough actual crappy stuff to think about as it is without inventing more. It was the finesse with which the story was delivered that held all the appeal for me. The narrator's description of her girlhood at a tony British boarding school was like a chum line ... little jarring bits among the classic school story format that eventually added up. And even after the grim details were all laid out (it's about organ donation), I liked that the thrust of the thing wasn't about how right or wrong these circumstances were (blessedly, Ishiguro let that be obvious), but rather how people might think and act if that was the situation they found themselves in.

Grade: A-
Recommended: Definitely to those who already like reading about dystopias, although I'm not sure this approach will work for everyone. There's a great focus on the mundane aspects of the character's experiences, which for me provides a contrast that makes the events seem even more chilling ... however, I can appreciate how it's teetering on a fine line, on the other side of which is bad imitative fallacy. Reading about teenagers acting tiresome can be ... tiresome. ( )
  delphica | Jun 10, 2009 |
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