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Content Details
 
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Never Let Me Go
by 
Kazuo Ishiguro
  
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Subject(s):  Fiction
Literature
Language(s):  English
Awards:  Man Booker Prize for Fiction Nominee
The Booker Prize Foundation

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook place eHold
Available copies:   0 (0 patron(s) on waiting list)
Library copies:   1
File size:   793 KB
ISBN:   9781400044832
Release date:   Apr 05, 2005

Description

From the Booker Prize-winning author of The Remains of the Day and When We Were Orphans, comes an unforgettable edge-of-your-seat mystery that is at once heartbreakingly tender and morally courageous about what it means to be human.

Hailsham seems like a pleasant English boarding school, far from the influences of the city. Its students are well tended and supported, trained in art and literature, and become just the sort of people the world wants them to be. But, curiously, they are taught nothing of the outside world and are allowed little contact with it.

Within the grounds of Hailsham, Kathy grows from schoolgirl to young woman, but it's only when she and her friends Ruth and Tommy leave the safe grounds of the school (as they always knew they would) that they realize the full truth of what Hailsham is.

Never Let Me Go breaks through the boundaries of the literary novel. It is a gripping mystery, a beautiful love story, and also a scathing critique of human arrogance and a moral examination of how we treat the vulnerable and different in our society. In exploring the themes of memory and the impact of the past, Ishiguro takes on the idea of a possible future to create his most moving and powerful book to date.

From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpts

Chapter One...
Anyway, I'm not making any big claims for myself. I know carers, working now, who are just as good and don't get half the credit. If you're one of them, I can understand how you might get resentful--about my bedsit, my car, above all, the way I get to pick and choose who I look after. And I'm a Hailsham student--which is enough by itself sometimes to get people's backs up. Kathy H., they say, she gets to pick and choose, and she always chooses her own kind: people from Hailsham, or one of the other privileged estates. No wonder she has a great record. I've heard it said enough, so I'm sure you've heard it plenty more, and maybe there's something in it. But I'm not the first to be allowed to pick and choose, and I doubt if I'll be the last. And anyway, I've done my share of looking after donors brought up in every kind of place. By the time I finish, remember, I'll have done twelve years of this, and it's only for the last six they've let me choose.

And why shouldn't they? Carers aren't machines. You try and do your best for every donor, but in the end, it wears you down. You don't have unlimited patience and energy. So when you get a chance to choose, of course, you choose your own kind. That's natural. There's no way I could have gone on for as long as I have if I'd stopped feeling for my donors every step of the way. And anyway, if I'd never started choosing, how would I ever have got close again to Ruth and Tommy after all those years?

But these days, of course, there are fewer and fewer donors left who I remember, and so in practice, I haven't been choosing that much. As I say, the work gets a lot harder when you don't have that deeper link with the donor, and though I'll miss being a carer, it feels just about right to be finishing at last come the end of the year.

Ruth, incidentally, was only the third or fourth donor I got to choose. She already had a carer assigned to her at the time, and I remember it taking a bit of nerve on my part. But in the end I managed it, and the instant I saw her again, at that recovery centre in Dover, all our differences--while they didn't exactly vanish--seemed not nearly as important as all the other things: like the fact that we'd grown up together at Hailsham, the fact that we knew and remembered things no one else did. It's ever since then, I suppose, I started seeking out for my donors people from the past, and whenever I could, people from Hailsham.

There have been times over the years when I've tried to leave Hailsham behind, when I've told myself I shouldn't look back so much. But then there came a point when I just stopped resisting. It had to do with this particular donor I had once, in my third year as a carer; it was his reaction when I mentioned I was from Hailsham. He'd just come through his third donation, it hadn't gone well, and he must have known he wasn't going to make it. He could hardly breathe, but he looked towards me and said: "Hailsham. I bet that was a beautiful place." Then the next morning, when I was making conversation to keep his mind off it all, and I asked where he'd grown up, he mentioned some place in Dorset and his face beneath the blotches went into a completely new kind of grimace. And I realised then how desperately he didn't want reminded. Instead, he wanted to hear about Hailsham.

So over the next five or six days, I told him whatever he wanted to know, and he'd lie there, all hooked up, a gentle smile breaking through. He'd ask me about the big things and the little things. About our guardians, about how we each had our own collection chests under our beds, the football, the rounders, the little path that took you all round the outside of the main house, round...
 

Reviews

The Times (UK)...
"A clear frontrunner to be the year's most extraordinary novel."
 
Publishers Weekly (starred review)...
"So exquisitely observed that even the most workaday objects and interactions are infused with a luminous, humming otherworldliness. The dystopian story it tells, meanwhile, gives it a different kind of electric charge. . . . An epic ethical horror story, told in devastatingly poignantminiature. . . . Ishiguro spins a stinging cautionary tale of science outpacing ethics."
 
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)...
"Perfect pacing and infinite subtlety. . . . That this stunningly brilliant fiction echoes Caryl Churchill's superb play A Number and Margaret Atwood's celebrated dystopian novels in no way diminishes its originality and power. A masterpiece of craftsmanship that offers an unparalleled emotional experience. Send a copy to the Swedish Academy."
 
Sunday Herald (UK)...
"Elegiac, compelling, otherworldly, deeply disturbing and profoundly moving."
 
The Guardian (UK)...
"Brilliant . . . Ishiguro's most profound statement of the endurance of human relationships. . . . The most exact and affecting of his books to date."
 
Library Journal (starred review)...
"Ishiguro's elegant prose and masterly ways with characterization make for a lovely tale of memory, self-understanding, and love."
 
Booklist...
"Ishiguro's provocative subject matter and taut, potent prose have earned him multiple literary decorations, including the French government's Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres and an Order of the British Empire for service to literature.... In this luminous offering, he nimbly navigates the landscape of emotion -- the inevitable link between present and past and the fine line between compassion and cruelty, pleasure and pain."
 
The Globe and Mail...
"His books are Zen gardens with no flowery metaphors, no wild, untamed weeds threatening -- or allowed -- to overrun the plot."
 
The Gazette (Montreal)...
"A writer of Ishiguro's intelligence, sensitivity and stylistic brilliance obviously offers rewards."
 
Joyce Carol Oates, TLS...
"Kazuo Ishiguro distinguishes himself as one of our most eloquent poets of loss."
 
Maclean's...
"Ishiguro is a stylist like no other, a writer who knows that the truth is often unspoken."
 
Michael Ondaatje...
"One of the finest prose stylists of our time."
 
The Guardian...
"Ishiguro shows immense tenderness for his characters, however absurd or deluded they may be."
 
The New York Times Book Review...
"[Ishiguro is] an original and remarkable genius."
 

About the Author

Kazuo Ishiguro was born in Nagasaki, Japan, in 1954 and now lives in London, England. Each of his understated, finely wrought novels has been published to international acclaim. He was in both of Granta's Best of Young British Novelists anthologies, and won the Booker Prize at thirty-four for Remains of the Day.

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