I thought of The Island, too - same premise, very different approach.
Legolas Send a noteboard - 20/10/2010 04:42:48 PM
I (unlike others) wasn't spoiled so i had the opportunity to read through and discover the key issues as they were elaborated in the story. I found it interesting that the cloning was treated with such subtlety though had to suspend disbelief a little. I kept wondering whether people would really accept their fate like that? It's like the opposite of The Island where the clones rebel (though that's in face of discovering a lie about their existence).
Obviously exploring the idea is more important to Ishiguro than the realism - he doesn't set his book in the future or bothers to explain where the technology for the cloning comes from, just goes with the assumption that it's there. But as for people accepting their fate... I imagine not all of them, but if they've been brought up that way, in isolation from normal society, well, I at least had no problems believing it.
The characters being a bit "meh" for me. Didn't love them, didn't hate them. Found them more childish and irritating, even after they'd grown up.
They are, but that's kind of the point, that they maintain this naivety and innocence because of their upbringing, despite being very much not naive in other regards.
I really dislike the use of not-so-subtle foreshadowing or linking sentences like "and that was the last time i spoke to Ruth until after the incident..... it was 6 years later when the incident happened". I guess after years of reading RJ who is a bit more subtle than that it's somewhat jarring.
That's not so much foreshadowing as it is just not taking a totally linear approach to the storytelling.
I don't know if that was really necessary, either, I know what you mean... I'm sure there's a good reason for it whenever he does it, though. So i guess i enjoyed it. I didn't find the issues particularly compelling, though, and that might have been due to overexposure of SciFi themes over the years.
Fair enough. The difference between sci-fi and a book like this is that in sci-fi, the focus is much more on the issue itself, while here the issue is just a plot device to create the characters and the setting of Hailsham, and the moral questions about whether clones have souls and all that.
Book Club Discussion: Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
- 18/10/2010 05:51:00 PM
1988 Views
I have just discovered that I loaned the book to someone recently as well.
- 18/10/2010 06:27:52 PM
877 Views
Might as well start with this - what did you think of Ishiguro's subtle treatment of the key issue?
- 18/10/2010 06:34:58 PM
879 Views
Are we talking the fact that they were clones?
- 18/10/2010 10:39:25 PM
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I may not be all that good in figuring such things out, but it wasn't so evident to me at all.
- 18/10/2010 11:06:00 PM
979 Views
I figured it out almost straight away.
- 19/10/2010 01:33:17 PM
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Re: What was the other book?
- 03/11/2010 09:35:01 PM
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What did you think of the characters?
- 18/10/2010 06:43:22 PM
967 Views
I find it difficult to sympathise with these characters and I wonder whether that's deliberate.
- 26/10/2010 03:56:34 PM
999 Views
Since Chas is making me wonder...
What did you think of the book? Like it, love it, hate it? *NM*
- 18/10/2010 11:13:55 PM
398 Views
What did you think of the book? Like it, love it, hate it? *NM*
- 18/10/2010 11:13:55 PM
398 Views
And I'm officially overusing the phrase "what did you think". *NM*
- 18/10/2010 11:14:15 PM
402 Views
Crap. I hope I didn't come across as too negative, because I loved the book.
- 19/10/2010 01:33:57 PM
978 Views
I liked it (with some exceptions)
- 20/10/2010 09:55:26 AM
1083 Views
I thought of The Island, too - same premise, very different approach.
- 20/10/2010 04:42:48 PM
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Right. A better answer, now that I've got the book and have refreshed my memory.
- 26/10/2010 03:53:58 PM
987 Views
Did you just compare Robert Jordan's writing style favourably to Ishiguro's?
- 02/03/2011 11:20:46 PM
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What do you think of the idea of growing cloned humans for donations?
- 31/10/2010 02:53:25 PM
872 Views
Miss Lucy, Miss Emily and Madame.
- 31/10/2010 02:56:27 PM
906 Views
