Klara and the Sun

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Kazuo Ishiguro: Klara and the Sun (2021, Faber & Faber, Limited)

320 pages

English language

Published Nov. 12, 2021 by Faber & Faber, Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-571-36620-0
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4 stars (74 reviews)

"Klara and the Sun, the first novel by Kazuo Ishiguro since he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, tells the story of Klara, an Artificial Friend with outstanding observational qualities, who, from her place in the store, watches carefully the behavior of those who come in to browse, and of those who pass on the street outside. She remains hopeful that a customer will soon choose her.

Klara and the Sun is a thrilling book that offers a look at our changing world through the eyes of an unforgettable narrator, and one that explores the fundamental question: what does it mean to love?

In its award citation in 2017, the Nobel committee described Ishiguro's books as "novels of great emotional force" and said he has "uncovered the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world.""

17 editions

reviewed Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

Klara And The Sun

5 stars

This was an interesting read and given that I have not read any of the author's other works, I was not quite sure what I was getting into. (Though, I have watched Remains Of The Day)

This book felt simple and yet complex. The simplicity was in the narrator: an AI or artificial friend who seems a bit naive and limited to her programming being a friend with a sick child. The complexity was in everything surrounding the two of them that wasn't said or maybe not said too loudly.

It is scifi and post apocalyptic, but you would not know it first delving into the story. Klara is a unique narrator but unreliable for such interesting times. Her unique view of the world drives the narrative most of the time.

The uses of faith, family, culture, society, technology and relationships really fleshes out the story and gives the quiet …

I needed time to emotionally process this book after reading it

5 stars

I'd never read anything from Ishiguro before. I picked it up, read the entire thing in one day from dawn til dusk, and found it such an easy read. I didn't even feel particularly engrossed I just knew that I was enjoying it and I wanted to read on. I was unfamiliar with Ishiguro's craftmanship and was unwittingly sucked into his trap

I won't spoil anything, but I spent a good hour or so in silent reflection after finishing the book, and for the week that followed I barely worked and spent a lot of time thinking about the book and reading reviews to try and figure out what on earth had just happened to me

Missed Opportunities

2 stars

The premise is beautiful, it hints at deep reflections about being human, but it didn't work for me. The dialogues were super weird and unnatural, they really bothered me. I missed more exploration of the technology behind the Artificial Friends (AF) and how they worked. Was Klara all mechanical? Was she an android? I wasn't convinced that AF's would find mystical significance in the Sun. The story hints at several themes but never really goes deep: environmental pollution, empathy, robots taking over human jobs, loneliness, gene editing, social class privilege. The plot is super simple and predictable, and the ending was very bleh. Probably not my thing.

A very readable journey

4 stars

A very readable journey into a possible future. A very interesting narrator, an artificially intelligent humanoid with good observational abilities but limited reasoning, which ultimately allows her to draw some curious and false conclusions.

Minor things about the proposed future slightly irk, for example we seem to have autonomous artificial friends, but driving is still something done by humans. Walking around is likely more difficult to automate than driving around, though companionship does not appear to be as difficult as we might have thought/hoped. That said, the future inhabitants all have something called an 'oblong', which seems to be roughly a futuristic smart phone. Do we then really need the artificial friends to be humanoid in look? Why can the artificial friend not simply be interfaced with through the oblong? Lastly, it seems that the artificial friends can perform chores if asked, why then does the main family still have …

reviewed Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

Surprisingly underwhelming

3 stars

  • I listened to this as an audiobook, my first checked out from Libby.
  • I liked the narrator's voice and felt it was generally quite well to meet the range of voices for the characters.
  • The book took too long to build up and the ending was too abstract and fell apart.
  • I also generally didn't like or understand why the characters were selected with the traits they had.
  • Some of the dialogue felt well played, while others felt jarring
  • In the end, my favorite part is Klara's relationship with the sun, which goes for the most part unexplored with other characters. This book has vague environmentalist themes.
  • many of the tropes that show up in this book I feel, have been better expressed in other works I've read.
  • I think this book would be fine for a middle schooler as it goes generally without much complexity with its readability. Though …

Pretty Nearly Perfect

5 stars

Maybe it's just because it pulls together a set of themes that happen to be dominating my mind right now, but this book feels like an absolute revelation. On one level, it's a dystopian exploration of the relationship between humanity and technology. But because the protagonist is a unique, three-dimensional character, rather than a boilerplate artificial intelligence, the novel is not a mere thought experiment in the template of "what if people had artificial friends"? It develops a deep experience at the swirling nexus of perception, belief, myth, and devotion. It seems to me that readers who found this book a little thin weren't taking seriously enough the "Sun" part of "Klara and the Sun." This isn't a book about AI. It's a book about a relationship between two entities who aren't conventionally regarded as people. Therein lies the ambition and success of Ishiguro's book.

An amazing book; can I have more stars to give it?

5 stars

This is one of those very rare books that reminds me of what books are at some level all about. That makes me want to go about and knock about two stars off of 99% of my prior book ratings, to make room to properly differentiate this one.

It's hard to say too much that's concrete, without giving it away. I was closer to tears at the end of this than I can remember with any book for a long time. Not easy maudlin tears, but deep oh-my-god tears about what a universe this is.

The people are very fully people; the viewpoint character is not a person, but ... well, that would be a spoiler also. But the viewpoint it gives her allows Ishiguro to say some amazing and touching and true and thought-provoking things without coming out and saying them (because nothing he could come out and say …

Really thought-provoking

5 stars

This is a story about and told by a human-formed "artificial friend" (AF) of a disabled teenager in a future world somewhat reminiscant of Gattaca (film). The genius is that it's told from the very limited perspective of the AF, Klara, so you only really get to understand things as she understands them.

There's a fascinating observation of humans' direction of travel being away from mystery and having a machine-like understanding of themselves, yet Klara is moving into mystery, and has some insightful perspectives.

It also nods to how artificial intellegence learns and furthers human bias (a massive and frightening contemporary issue); it seems that the main characters are white such that Klara has to note when people are "black skinned" even though it's not relevant to the story - a common white-person microaggression that perpetuates racist other-ing and normalising of whiteness.

The world described sounds terrifying (racism, class, power …

Review of 'Klara and the Sun' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Through the eyes and thoughts of a unique narrator, "Klara and the Sun" takes us to a not-so-distant future, where AI-imbued dolls are children's playmates. Quite slowly we begin to understand that something is amiss in this world, but what exactly that is, we won't find out for a while.

What a fascinating book. For a long time, I found it hard to see where it was going. In fact I did think the introduction could have been a bit shorter - Klara doesn't leave her store until about 25% into the story.
The actual plot that evolves in front of us is surprising, and we learn some (not all!) things about the world Klara is in. It remains unclear what is happening to the children until a late point during the plot (in fact I would have preferred to to have it laid out so openly), and this opens …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, science fiction, general
  • Fiction, dystopian
  • British and irish fiction (fictional works by one author)

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