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Format: Paperback
 ISBN-10: 0786221720
 ISBN-13: 9780786221721
 Dec 1999
 Publisher: Putnam Pub Group
 238 pages
 Large Print
 THORNDIKE PRESS LARGE PRINT BUCKINGHAMS
 Language: English |
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Synopsis In Kazuo Ishiguro's memoir-like first novel (1982), Etsuko, a Japanese woman now living alone in England, dwells obsessively on the recent suicide of her daughter. She also finds her memory drifting to a long-ago summer in Nagasaki, when the tensions between prewar and postwar habits and traditions were embodied in a woman named Sachiko, who is torn between the two worlds, and Etsuko's husband, Jiro, who has readily adapted to modern Westernized Japan despite what he may feel. Now in exile, Etsuko relives the scenes of Japan's devastation in the wake of World War II as well as her daughter's self-destruction, leaving the reader to find the parallels and to harmonize the book's enigmatic ending with all that has gone before. As in all Kazuo Ishiguro's novels, past and present comment on each other in a complex portrait of the Japanese character.
| Details | | Series: | THORNDIKE PRESS LARGE PRINT BUCKINGHAMS |
| Size | | Length: | 238 pages | | Height: | 8.5 in | | Width: | 5.5 in | | Thickness: | 0.8 in | | Weight: | 11.2 oz |
Publisher's Notes
First Line: "Niki, the name we finally gave to my younger daughter, is not an abbreviation; it was a compromise I reached with her father."
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