Guest of the ilb 2005
Kazuo Ishiguro
was born in Nagasaki in 1954. At the age of five his family moved to
England, where his father embarked on research at the National
Institute of Oceanography. What was initially a short-term arrangement
soon became a permanent residence. After attending school in Surrey he
worked temporarily as a grouse-beater for the Queen Mother. Whilst
aspiring to become a rock star he was employed as a social worker,
caring for homeless people in Scotland, before reading English and
Philosophy at the University of Kent in Canterbury. He then went on to
study Creative Writing under Malcolm Bradbury at the University of East
Anglia. Ishiguro’s first novel, »A Pale View of Hills«, soon followed
in 1982, and won the Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize. The publication of
five subsequent novels and four screenplays for television and cinema
further established his status as a leading exponent of British
literature. Central to his works are individuals who have become so
deeply submerged in their own worlds, that they ignore the very forces
that drive them. They delve nostalgically into their inner thoughts and
memories, an act which eventually brings them to realise, to some
extent, their powerlessness against their own fate. »An Artist of the
Floating World« (1986), a novel about a painter in the service of the
Japanese imperial regime, received the Whitbread Book of the Year
award. The Booker Prize-winning »The Remains of the Day« (1989) follows
an overzealous butler through the Second World War, whose complete
dedication to service results in a failure to lead his own life. This
world bestseller was made into an award-winning picture starring
Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson. Following the kafkaesque »The
Unconsoled« (1995) – awarded with the Cheltenham Prize – came »When We
Were Orphans« in 2000. This unorthodox detective story depicts a lonely
and somewhat old-fashioned private investigator who travels to Shanghai
in the nineteen thirties to explain the disappearance of his parents
and, in doing so, reveals his delusional self-perception. His latest
novel, »Never Let Me Go« (2005), is a mild horror story set in a
boarding school where the pupils are protected from a terrible secret,
which as they grow older they will inevitably be confronted with. The
film »The White Countess«, directed by James Ivory – of which Ishiguro
wrote the original screenplay – will be released in November 2005. In
1995 Ishiguro received the Order of the British Empire for services to
literature and in 1998 was made a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des
Lettres. In addition, he is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Ishiguro lives in London with his wife and daughter.
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