Never Let Me Go
(Kazuo Ishiguro)
Born in Nagazaki in 1954, arriving in England at the age of 5, from the eighties, Ishiguro has become something of a prodigy and an enfant terrible in the literary world. His novel "The Remains of Day" made him all the more famous when James Ivory turned it into a film. Having an excellent style, faithful to a British culture made up of deadpan humour, of nonsense, of radical criticism, Ishiguro paints a study without concession of his country of adoption and its history. If there was in the previous two novels, "When we were Orphans" and "The Unconsoled", a mirthful clownish tone as a counterpoint to emotion and seriousness of purpose, it is not the case in this tale of despair that borrows traits of political fiction from Huxley and Orwell. The characters have benefited as children, outside the normal world, from a privileged education, through which they discover little by little, having become adolescents then adults, the terrible final realities. A systematic exposure of the zones of the most unbearable shades of a totalitarian society devoting itself to biopower, to me it is without doubt an alarm call and a new masterpiece by Kazuo Ishiguro..
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