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The Buried Giant

Kazuo Ishiguro

£4.00
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An extraordinary new novel from the author of Never Let Me Go and the Booker Prize-winning The Remains of the Day. "You've long set your heart against it, Axl, I know. But it's time now to think on it anew. There's a journey we must go on, and no more delay..." The Romans have long since departed, and Britain is steadily declining into ruin. But at least the wars that once ravaged the country have ceased. The Buried Giant begins as a couple, Axl and Beatrice, set off across a troubled land of mist and rain in the hope of finding a son they have not seen for years. They expect to face many hazards ? some strange and other-worldly ? but they cannot yet foresee how their journey will reveal to them dark and forgotten corners of their love for one another. Sometimes savage, often intensely moving, Kazuo Ishiguro's first novel in a decade is about lost memories, love, revenge and war.

ISBN 9780570000000
Publisher Faber and Faber

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Kazuo Ishiguro

Kazuo Ishiguro was born in Nagasaki, Japan, in 1954, the son of an oceanographer. When he was five, his father was invited to work at the National Institute of Oceanography in Surrey, and the family relocated to England with the intention of returning within a few years. They never did. Ishiguro grew up in England, educated at the University of Kent and the University of East Anglia — where he studied creative writing under Malcolm Bradbury and Angela Carter — and became British in experience and literary formation while remaining, in some indefinable way, profoundly shaped by a Japan he left too early to properly remember. This condition — the imaginative reconstruction of an origin that cannot be directly recalled — is the subject of his first two novels and haunts all the work that follows.

His early novels, A Pale View of Hills and An Artist of the Floating World, are set in Japan and concern characters reckoning with personal and national histories in the aftermath of the Second World War. They are formally controlled works of great emotional restraint, establishing the narrative technique that would define Ishiguro's career: the unreliable first-person narrator who tells us, with apparent completeness and sincerity, a version of their own history that gradually reveals itself to be incomplete, self-serving, or constructed to avoid a truth too painful to face directly.

The Remains of the Day, published in 1989 and winner of the Booker Prize, is his masterwork and one of the most celebrated British novels of the twentieth century. Stevens, an elderly English butler, takes a rare motoring holiday through the West Country while reconstructing the decades he spent in service to a lord who turned out to be a Nazi sympathiser. The novel is built from what Stevens cannot bring himself to say: his love for a housekeeper, his knowledge of his employer's true politics, his understanding of his own waste. It is a work of devastating formal precision. Never Let Me Go — set in an alternative England where a class of children have been created for the specific purpose of donating their organs — extends these techniques into science fiction with devastating effect.

Ishiguro was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017. His subsequent novel, Klara and the Sun, narrated by an artificial friend, continues his exploration of consciousness, memory, and what it means to love something or someone when you know the relationship must end.

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