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Novelist
& Screenwriter
5th Avenue Theatre
October 16, 1995
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Kazuo Ishiguro was born in Nagasaki, Japan in 1954 and moved with his
family temporarily to England in 1960 for his fathers job. The family
hoped to return to Japan, so his parents spoke in Japanese and supplemented
his education with materials from Japan. However, they ended up settling
in a middle class neighborhood south of London where Ishiguro experienced
a typical middle class British upbringing. He studied literature and philosophy
at the University of Kent and hoped to become a singer-songwriter. At
age 25, after travelling, singing in pubs, odd jobs, and social work,
Ishiguro went to the University of East Anglia to complete a Creative
Masters program. He began to write fiction to put down on paper his early
memories of Japan.
In 1982, Ishiguro published his first novel A Pale View of Hills,
which won the Winifred Holtby Prize. His second novel, An Artist of
the Floating World won the Whitbread Book of the Year Award and was
based on the two cultures of his childhood. The Remains of the Day
won the 1989 Booker Prize. In an interview with the New York Times,
Ishiguro said, "I am writing entirely out of my experience; its
just that I dont see any reason to be literal about it. . . . These
books are autobiographical in the sense that I spend a lot of my time
trying to think of the way to express the way I feel the world works"
Ishiguro lives in London.
Excerpt taken from When We Were Orphans (2001)
It was the summer of 1923, the summer I came down from Cambridge, when
despite my aunt's wishes that I return to Shropshire, I decided my future
lay in the capital and took up a small flat at Number 14b Bedford Gardens
in Kensington. I remember it now as the most wonderful of summers. After
years of being surrounded by fellows, both at school and at Cambridge,
I took great pleasure in my own company. I enjoyed the London parks, the
quiet of the Reading Room at the British Museum; I indulged entire afternoons
strolling the streets of Kensington, outlining to myself plans for my
future, pausing once in a while to admire how here in England, even in
the midst of such a great city, creepers and ivy are to be found clinging
to the fronts of fine houses.
It was on one such leisurely walk that I encountered quite by chance an
old schoolfriend, James Osbourne, and discovering him to be a neighbour,
suggested he call on me when he was next passing. Although at that point
I had yet to receive a single visitor in my rooms, I issued my invitation
with confidence, having chosen the premises with some care. The rent was
not high, but my landlady had furnished the place in a tasteful manner
that evoked an unhurried Victorian past; the drawing room, which received
plenty of sun throughout the first half of the day, contained an ageing
sofa as well as two snug armchairs, an antique sideboard and an oak bookcase
filled with crumbling encyclopaediasall of which I was convinced
would win the approval of any visitor. Moreover, almost immediately upon
taking the rooms, I had walked over to Knightsbridge and acquired there
a Queen Anne tea service, several packets of fine teas, and a large tin
of biscuits. So when Osbourne did happen along one morning a few days
later, I was able to serve out the refreshments with an assurance that
never once permitted him to suppose he was my first guest.
For the first fifteen minutes or so, Osbourne moved restlessly around
my drawing room, complimenting me on the premises, examining this and
that, looking regularly out of the windows to exclaim at whatever was
going on below. Eventually he flopped down into the sofa, and we were
able to exchange news -- our own and that of old schoolfriends. I remember
we spent a little time discussing the activities of the workers' unions,
before embarking on a long and enjoyable debate on German philosophy,
which enabled us to display to one another the intellectual prowess we
each had gained at our respective universities. Then Osbourne rose and
began his pacing again, pronouncing as he did so upon his various plans
for the future.
Selected
Works
A Pale View of Hills (1982)
An Artist of the Floating World (1986)
The Remains of the Day (1989)
The Unconsoled (1995)
When We Were Orphans (2001)
Web
Site Links
Interview
with Ishiguro
Reading group guide
for The Unconsoled
Salon.com review
of When We Were Orphans
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