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#Kazou Ishiguro
eannpatterson · 1 year
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Clouds, bees and artificial friends
Anthropomorphism featured in several of the books that I read during my recent digital detox [see ‘Entropy and junkies‘ on August 2nd, 2023].  I really liked the opening section of ‘When I Sing, Mountains Dance‘ by Irene Sola which is narrated from the perspective of clouds that arrive over a landscape with painfully full ‘black bellies, burdened with cold, dark water, lightening bolts,…
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xinesegalas · 1 year
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South Park's Crystal Ball: A Look at Klara and The Sun's Speculative AI Future
Immerse yourself in Kazuo Ishiguro's "Klara and The Sun," where AI meets humanity. Explore the power of storytelling and uncover intriguing connections to pop culture, like the iconic series South Park. Join us on this literary journey!
Welcome to the Lit Lounge, a captivating haven where literature aficionados can gather to delve into the depths of intriguing books and embark on thought-provoking literary journeys. I invite you to join me as I explore the mesmerizing world of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara and The Sun, delving into its profound themes and drawing fascinating connections to unexpected corners of popular culture.  I…
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nagdabbit · 1 month
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books! this is some of the stuff I've liked in the past couple of yrs.
Nobody is Talking About This, as already suggested
horror: Ring Shout - P. Djeli Clark. Black women fighting KKK but also there are weird alien things.
Camp Damascus - Chuck Tingle. queer woman fighting a church conversion camp but also there are weird demon things.
The Ballad of Black Tom - Victor Lavalle. this is a Lovecraft retelling set in 1920s Harlem so maybe too close to actual Lovecraft for you? but it definitely had me staring at the wall occasionally.
not horror, but weird: We Had to Remove this Post - Hanna Bervoets. super short and fucking WEIRD. about a woman who works doing quality control responding to reports for a twitteresque company.
not horror or weird, but goofy enough to possibly break a reading slump from sheer amusement: Kaiju Preservation Society - John Scalzi. Our hero (gender never given) gets a job working for a secret organization. It's basically Jurassic Park but make it kaiju and with less science and more jokes.
I also recently discovered a small queer indie press called Neon Hemlock and I've loved everything I've read from them so far so if you can find any of their stuff, I recommend! And they're almost all novellas so nothing really draggy.
fucking fuck yesssss thanj you and god bless im adding adding all of these to my reading list immediately
im so pumped todd ordered both camp damascus and bury your gays the other day, im so excited to read them! or try to at least if my brain cooperates
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bughideout · 2 months
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My reading goal of the year is 20 books
Books I've read this year
Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka
Never let me go, Kazou Ishiguro
Heaven, Meiko Kawakami
If cats disappeared from the world, Genki Kawamura
Minor detail, Adania Shibli
Notes from underground, fyodor dostoevsky
Nineteen eighty-four, George Orwell
Almond, Won-pyung Sohn
These violent delights, Micah Nemerever
Minor Detail is a book that left a strong impression on me, it's a short read and I cannot recommend it enough. I read the entire thing in one sitting. Normally I would be capable of reading more through a year but it's been a really tough year, becoming fatherless and all. (Hes not dead, just not in my life, he sucks) and graduating from 10th grade and starting a new school is very tough for me as an autistic person. Most of these books were read in January and then I didn't read way too much throughout the year until recently.
My tbr/books I am reading
The brothers karamazov, fyodor dostoevsky
The plague, Albert camus
The world according to physics, Jim al-khalili
The unbearable lightness of being, Milan Kundera
Life for sale, yukio mishima
Nausea, Jean-Paul Sartre
All the lovers in the night, meiko kawakami
White nights, fyodor dostoevsky
The double, fyodor dostoevsky
A man's place, Annie Ernoux
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kitten4sannie · 4 months
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hello! I just want to say that I’m currently reading this book called Klara and the Sun by Kazou Ishiguro and it somehow reminded me of your fic about your edging smut fic of Yunho in space 🥹
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you were reading a novel and you thought of my space yuyu fic???? (´°̥̥̥̥̥̥̥̥ω°̥̥̥̥̥̥̥̥`) that’s ,, wow i’m really honored that you still had my fic in your memory ;; i’m gonna go cry nowwww thank you for taking the time to tell me this love :’) <333
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17.04.2023. Currently reading Klara and the Sun by Kazou Ishiguro.
Our generation still carry the old feelings. A part of us refuses to let go. The part that wants to keep believing there’s something unreachable inside each of us. Something that’s unique and won’t transfer. But there’s nothing like that, we know that now. You know that. For people our age it’s a hard one to let go. - Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
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vincent-tran · 7 months
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Never Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishiguro
This is the first (non-fiction) book I finished this year. The storyline is quite simple and I could figure out the theme after a few chapters.
Nevertheless, this book's storytelling got me hooked on Kazuo's work. It's apparently not simple to become a winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Even the background is in the 90s in the Great Britain, the main concept is rather futuristic about human cloning to cultivate organs. The story revolves around three friends: Kathy, Ruth and Tom, who spent their childhood at Hailsham - sort of a boarding school for clones (or "students" as mentioned in the book). The story follows the narrative of Kathy, and how she tried to reconcile with her childhood in Hailsham, the time being in the Cottages as a transition period from students to carers and then donors.
The terms in this universe are used selectively such as "complete" meaning "dead due to organ donations" or "possible" as the people whom the clones resemble. These terms somehow implied that the fates of the clones are determined from the beginning.
The main plot is about Hailsham being the centre that advocates proving the humanity of the clones. They collected art from the "clones"/students and toured around the world to raise funds and awareness about the clones industry.
The novel is so humane in so many small details. Like this way Kathy checked the porn stars' magazine, because she thought that she might find her "possible" in one of these magazines as she is also horny all the time. Or the way, Tom yeld in the empty field after knowing the truth from Miss Emily and Madam and then, Kathy said it seems like Tom also knew about the truth so he is also turbulent.
The hope of deferral even though just a false hope has highlighted how humane these clones can be. It's so touching how Ruth finally burst out her secrets and guilt to persuade Kathy and Tom to try for the defer, how Tom tried his best to reveal his "soul" through his drawings of peculiar animals in his sketchbook.
In the last part of the novel, Kathy went to Hailsham and looked at it from afar and then drove away to where she needed to be. It's so heartbroken how she could just accept the brutal reality. But as someone commented about the novel, the people in Kazou's novels don't fight against their fates. They just endure what fates brought to them.
I think "endure" is a beautiful and accurate description of what happened here with the "clones". They live in their universe, where their lives's purposes have been determined before they are created. It's somehow just like us living in this world. Sometimes I just think that some supernatural entity looks at us (human beings on Earth) like a colony of ants in a gigantic glass box. We somehow act and function in a predefined destiny that we are aware but no matter how much we fight, we somehow just fall in line with what is prepared for us.
Anyway, great book to read and look forward to watching the movie inspired by this book.
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alexalblondo · 1 year
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I haven't been reading alot recently but some of my faves are these, hope i can talk you into reading atleast one 😭
Never let me go by kazou ishiguro (I stared at the wall for 10mins straight after finishing it and still get this hollow feeling whenever I think about the ending, def recc jumping in without knowing anything)
Lotr (I don't think there is anything I can say about it that hasn't already been said)
The earthsea cycle by Ursula Le Guin (you can read anything by her really, such a talented author who truly understand what the genre stands for and never reduces it to just wizards and dragons)
No longer human by Osamu Dazai (really enjoyed the prose of this one, the story is fine but i was there for the beautiful writing. Cannot imagine how well its written in japanese if the translation made me wanna gnaw on my hand)
Demian by Hermann Hesse (god if I could steal his writing skill, every sentence is an experience)
I would love to hear about some works you like too 🥹🩷
the first one sounds amazing and I'll def look into it but anon, I cannot get over you recommending a book by Hermann Hesse this takes me back <333
(also lotr is amazing and I love her so much she is an icon)
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stickyfrogtoy · 6 years
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wellesleybooks · 7 years
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Kazuo Ishiguro has his prize and we have copies of his Nobel Lecture.
My Twentieth Century Evening and Other Small Breakthroughs: The Nobel Lecture  by Kazou Ishiguro
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Never Let Me Go review
3.75/5 stars
@readerbookclub
I did this for my last review too but this book gave me dark academia and coffee shop vibes. I felt like the main character was sitting with me and taking me with her down memory lane. The tense of the book was laid back. If it wasn’t for one thing I would have rated it 5 stars. 
I had a hard time understanding what was going on. Maybe it was just me but the concept of clones and possibles and why Hailsham existed and their goals were really murky to me. It was explained a bit more in one of the very last chapters but it was difficult to understand exactly what was happening in the world of Never Let Me Go. 
One thing I really loved though was Kath and Tommy. I hated (and I mean hated) Ruth with Tommy and shipped Kath with him since the beginning. I loved the dynamics of their relationships and I never though Ruth was patient enough to deal with Tommy being a ditz all the time. 
Overall it was such a pleasant read and a recommend it to people who like the dark academia and coffee shop aesthetics. 
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wkemeup · 2 years
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What did you read during your vacation? Which one was your fave?
Klara and the Sun by Kazou Ishiguro (3.5✨)
The Roughest Draft by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka (4✨)
Weather Girl by Rachel Lynn Solomon (4✨)
The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune (5✨)
They were all good but House in the Cerulean Sea was my favorite!
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nagdabbit · 2 years
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oooo i got tagged by @sybilius (🥰🥰 fank you) to do a list of comfort thimgs and umfortunately im drumk im so sorry i still refuseto turm on autocorreect but ill try hard here we go
comfort movie: as we kmow i do not watch manymovies but probably like kong skull islamd, big eden, or in bruges
comfort series (bomus): hannibal. fuckim love hannibal. does dimension20 count? that too. slesspecially a court offey amd flowers
comfort foodd: pistachio semlar, tostones and kechup, pamcakes
confort clothes: siobhans coolege hoodie amd crocs
comfort somg: wild montama skies - john demver & emmylou harris, bleed out - mountaim goats, hold the girl - rina sawayama, screamy dreamy - laura jame grace amd the devuorimg mothers
comfort book: the buried giamt by kazou ishiguro. nothimg to add perfec book
confort game: hades, pillers of etermity, coral islamd. im replayimg pillers i swear im gomna romance aloth this time im not gomma fucj the hornt fishman
i never kmow who to tag cuz i dummo if people actually likeme amd i assume that its always gomma be umwanted so like ifyou wanma do it amd youre readimg this consider yourself tagged tellem daggs semt ya
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melody-studyblr · 2 years
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books i've read so far this year:
if you have any questions on any of them pop into my asks and let me know :) and of course recs are greatly appreciated haha!
the remains of day (kazou ishiguro)
2. the professor (charlotte brontë)
3. agnes grey (anne brontë)
4. the double (fyodor dostoevsky)
5. the seven husbands of evelyn hugo (taylor jenkins reid)
6. tender is the night (f. scott fitzgerald)
7. the extraordinaries (tj klune)
8. hamnet (maggie o'farrell)
9. rules of civility (amor towles)
10. flash fire (tj klune)
11. the perks of being a wallflower (stephen chobsky)
12. heartstopper x4(alice oseman)
13. the beautiful and damned (f. scott fitzgerald)
14. malibu rising (taylor jenkins reid)
15. heidi (johanna spyri)
16. night (elie wiesel)
*these are in order !
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slutforwings · 2 years
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ive now read 2 kazou ishiguro books and they have the following in common: a story that keeps hinting and hinting at what the reader doesnt know and it keeps you on your toes the whole time and its so so strange but you're SO close to finding out more. and then you get an ending to the story being told but there's still SO many more questions and just a feeling of. was this it. huh.
ngl, theyre still good books. had a ton of fun reading them. however. what the fuck.
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jadelotusflower · 3 years
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2021 Roundup: Reading
I read 28 books in 2021, an improvement on last year but below my goal (two fiction, one non-fiction a month). Looking back at this list there is definitely a theme, I suppose my goal for 2022 is to step out of my wheelhouse (western historical) and aim for more diversity in setting and authorship.
I still have a bunch on my to read pile but got through a few this year - so open to recommendations!
Fiction:
The Boleyn King - Laura Anderson
Samara Island and the Blood Witch - Luke Summers
Hag Seed - Margaret Atwood
Benevolence - Julie Janson
One Day - David Nicholls
David Copperfield - Charles Dickens
A Column of Fire - Ken Follett
The Duke and I - Julia Quinn
Faeries - Brian Froud and Alan Lee
Circe - Madeline Millar
The Penelopiad - Margaret Atwood
The Hundred and One Dalmations - Dodie Smith
The Once and Future King - TH White
The Good People - Hannah Kent
Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë
Wide Sargasso Sea - Jean Rhys
Saving Fish From Drowning - Amy Tan
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
Through the Looking Glass and what Alice Found there - Lewis Carroll
The Remains of the Day - Kazou Ishiguro
Katherine Parr: The Sixth Wife - Alison Weir
The Viscount who loved me - Julia Quinn
Contact - Carl Sagan
Non-Fiction:
Dark Emu - Bruce Pascoe
She Wolves: The Notorious Queens of England - Elizabeth Norton
Mythos - Stephen Fry
Don’t call it a cult: Keith Raniere and the women of NXIVM - Sarah Berman
Britain After Rome: the Fall and Rise 400 to 1070 - Robin Fleming
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