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Kazuo Ishiguro, best-known for the brilliantly written The Remains of the Day, is the only author whose entire oeuvre I've read. The fact that he publishes about one book every five years makes the task easier, but this is not the main reason. Time and again, I fall for the elegant, contemplative an ... (continue)
Kazuo Ishiguro, best-known for the brilliantly written The Remains of the Day, is the only author whose entire oeuvre I've read. The fact that he publishes about one book every five years makes the task easier, but this is not the main reason. Time and again, I fall for the elegant, contemplative and somewhat detached tone of his novels, and the oceans of emotions that stir beneath the surface of his prose.
In this collection of five short stories, the protagonists are all musicians, but the music is not what's at the centre of these stories. They serve mainly as a setting for the exploration of relationship issues. Most couples in the stories are breaking up, about to break up, or wondering whether they should.
None of these stories become melodramatic, partly due to the casual and sometimes witty tone of the narrator, and partly because most of time, the characters do not reveal their true feelings. They can be read between the lines - which to me is the best place for literary emotions to reside.
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