Ishiguro is usually rather good with characters, or at least he was in the magnificent Remains of the Day, which most of you probably have read as well. What about here? Our protagonist Kathy is a contemplative kind of character, but her view of other characters, particularly Tommy and Ruth, isn't necessarily how they actually are - and tells us things about Kathy herself, as well. Did all that work for you? Did you sympathize with the characters? If not, why not?
SO Evil. I am sure she was the one to take the tape, and the way she sabotaged Tommy and Kathy. SO evil. She lends some credence to the soulless-hypothesis.
She becomes a little more nuanced, but I never managed to warm to her. I suppose her horrible selfishness and spite is thrown into high relieff because of the short amount of time they have, and the impossibility of staving it off.
Kathy sometimes annoyed me, mainly for being too nice to Ruth. She takes everything. I am surprised to find her so stoic, and I wonder whether it is due to the environment at Hailsham -- that the students we encounter all have different ways of coping with what they experience as an inevitable fate: Tommy has rage, Ruth some sort of delusional egocentricity, and Kathy goes stoic.
I came to sympathise with Miss Emily after a while. I saw the writing on the wall quite early on, and I immediately took to Miss Lucy; but having finished the book, I lean rather more towards Miss Emily and Madame. But I like how those two ways of looking at it is left open. And I like how the guardians' perspective is stated, but never fully explored: it is not the focus. The focus is the demonstration of individuality and "soul", I suppose. The "reality" of the children.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
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
880 Views
Are we talking the fact that they were clones?
- 18/10/2010 10:39:25 PM
1026 Views
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
980 Views
I figured it out almost straight away.
- 19/10/2010 01:33:17 PM
925 Views
Re: What was the other book?
- 03/11/2010 09:35:01 PM
1066 Views
What did you think of the characters?
- 18/10/2010 06:43:22 PM
968 Views
I find it difficult to sympathise with these characters and I wonder whether that's deliberate.
- 26/10/2010 03:56:34 PM
1000 Views
Ruth is Evil
- 02/03/2011 11:08:47 PM
1043 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
979 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
1001 Views
Right. A better answer, now that I've got the book and have refreshed my memory.
- 26/10/2010 03:53:58 PM
988 Views
Did you just compare Robert Jordan's writing style favourably to Ishiguro's?
- 02/03/2011 11:20:46 PM
924 Views
What do you think of the idea of growing cloned humans for donations?
- 31/10/2010 02:53:25 PM
873 Views
Miss Lucy, Miss Emily and Madame.
- 31/10/2010 02:56:27 PM
907 Views
