Series: Book 1 in the Novels series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Alire, Lang:en
Summary
From the Booker Prize-winning author of
The Remains of the Day comes a devastating new novel
of innocence, knowledge, and loss. As children Kathy, Ruth,
and Tommy were students at Hailsham, an exclusive boarding
school secluded in the English countryside. It was a place of
mercurial cliques and mysterious rules where teachers were
constantly reminding their charges of how special they were.
Now, years later, Kathy is a young woman. Ruth and Tommy
have reentered her life. And for the first time she is
beginning to look back at their shared past and understand
just what it is that makes them special–and how that
gift will shape the rest of their time together. Suspenseful,
moving, beautifully atmospheric,
Never Let Me Go is another classic by the author of
The Remains of the Day. All children should believe they are special. But the
students of Hailsham, an elite school in the English
countryside, are so special that visitors shun them, and only
by rumor and the occasional fleeting remark by a teacher do
they discover their unconventional origins and strange
destiny. Kazuo Ishiguro's sixth novel,
Never Let Me Go, is a masterpiece of indirection.
Like the students of Hailsham, readers are "told but not
told" what is going on and should be allowed to discover the
secrets of Hailsham and the truth about these children on
their own. Offsetting the bizarreness of these revelations is the
placid, measured voice of the narrator, Kathy H., a
31-year-old Hailsham alumna who, at the close of the 1990s,
is consciously ending one phase of her life and beginning
another. She is in a reflective mood, and recounts not only
her childhood memories, but her quest in adulthood to find
out more about Hailsham and the idealistic women who ran it.
Although often poignant, Kathy's matter-of-fact narration
blunts the sharper emotional effects you might expect in a
novel that deals with illness, self-sacrifice, and the severe
restriction of personal freedoms. As in Ishiguro's best-known
work,
The Remains of the Day, only after closing the book
do you absorb the magnitude of what his characters endure.
--Regina Marler
Adult/High School–The elegance of Ishiguro's prose
and the pitch-perfect voice of his narrator conspire to usher
readers convincingly into the remembered world of Hailsham, a
British boarding school for special students. The
reminiscence is told from the point of view of Kathy H., now
31, whose evocation of the sheltered estate's sunlit rolling
hills, guardians, dormitories, and sports pavilions is imbued
with undercurrents of muted tension and foreboding that
presage a darker reality. As an adult, Kathy re-engages in
lapsed friendships with classmates Ruth and Tommy, examining
the details of their shared youth and revisiting with growing
awareness the clues and anecdotal evidence apparent to them
even as youngsters that they were different from everyone
outside. [...] Ishiguro conveys with exquisite sensitivity
the emotional texture of the threesome's relationship, their
bonds of personal loyalty that overcome fractures of trust,
the palpable boundaries of hope, and the human capacity for
forgiveness. Highly recommended for literary merit and as an
exceptional platform for the discussion of a controversial
topic.
–Lynn Nutwell, Fairfax City Regional Library,
VA
Amazon.com Review
From School Library Journal
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