I first read this novel as part of my A-Level English Literature course but have thought of it often since and the longer it sits, the more relevant it seems to become. Then, somewhere in the obscurity and academic debate of these questions, the protagonist, Kathy H, and others like her, find themselves caught and suspended in uncertainty. This difference is not at first obvious, but brings to light a burdening load of moral questions as it is revealed. Ishiguro deals with a world much like our own, but with one significant difference that changes our view of everything. Better examples of an author’s ability to create a sense of isolation and dread in a protagonist must be few and far between. Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro is a powerful novel about identity and belonging, the struggle to find a place in a bleak and hostile society and, underneath all of the turmoil, the things which offer us the brightest hope.
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