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  • Klara and the Sun: Longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize
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Klara and the Sun: Longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize

Klara and the Sun: Longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize

byKazuo Ishiguro
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Craig Middleton
5.0 out of 5 starsClever and Unusual
Reviewed in Australia on 28 April 2021
The notion of Artificial Intelligence or the AF (artificial friend) is explored in Ishiguro's latest novel, Klara and the Sun. Through the eyes of Klara (AF), we see the world, her wishes, dreams, and developing relationships with her new owner, family, and friends. This is an unusual novel, in so far as it delves into the questions of what it means to be human and what it means to actually Love.

We begin the tale at the AF shop amongst other AF's on display to be sold. Klara and her fellow AF, Rosie, are standing side by side at the store's back. Occasionally the Manager moves Klara to the front window on a striped couch to gain a better opportunity to be seen and hopefully purchased. It is here we see the outside world through Klara's eyes. The crosswalk where many people cross the road, and the many taxis that fill her vision.

Klara has the innocence of a child though the intelligence or potential intelligence of an adult. What sets Klara apart from the other AF's is her keen observational abilities and her unrelenting curiosity about the behavior and motivations of the human's around her.

Finally one day while Klara and Rosie are positioned in the front window, Klara observes a woman and a little girl get out of a taxi. While the woman speaks to another human, the little girl approaches the window and asks Klara questions through the glass. All Klara can do is smile and nod her head, but a bond is created between them on their first meeting. From that day, Klara wants to be the AF to the little girl who we come to know as Josie. After a few mishaps and challenges, Josie and her mother buy Klara, and she is shipped to their home in the country. It's at this point we discover that the little girl is suffering from a serious illness.

What I found striking about Klara was her deep-seated sensitivity and overall kindness. This AF always thinks about other people's feelings, whether AI or human, above her own. One may argue this AF is programmed that way, but as mentioned, this AF is unique. Although it is her job to be the friend of her owner Josie, Klara takes this friendship to its limits to ensure a positive survival for the child and everyone around her.

As you would expect the Sun is a major character in this tale. Because the AF's are solar-powered, the sun is a source of life for them, and as Klara realizes, the sun is a source of life for all living things. This is a key theme throughout the novel.

The questions of what it means to be human have been explored in many novels in the past. For example, Phillip K. Dick's, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and Mary Shelly's Frankenstein, can loosely fit into this category. But Ishiguro takes this notion a step further by illustrating that true love, sacrifice for another, and the layered depths of the human heart are the things that truly make us human.

Once turning the last page, I didn't know whether to be sad, hopeful or both, yet the images, thoughts, and feelings of the tale remained with me for many days afterward.
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Satisfied Reader
3.0 out of 5 starsNot my up of tea but can see the allure
Reviewed in Australia on 8 October 2021
Klara and the Sun is a lesson in human emotion. Throughout the book you're seeing the world through Klara's naive eyes. Love, motherhood, childhood, and the hard choices a family makes are all seen and interpreted through Klara's robot mind. Some things are left for the reader to interpret but everything else can be inferred from each experience. The book wraps up nicely and leaves you with a lot of messages. The one I took from it was that change is constant throughout life but you need people beside you to get through it.

I thought the book was well written but the author chose to expand and heavily detail out pointless things. Then when something impact up came along, it just felt rushed. It made reading a little tedious. Luckily it wasn't an overly long book. Definitely not my normal read but a welcome change.
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One person found this helpful

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From Australia

Satisfied Reader
3.0 out of 5 stars Not my up of tea but can see the allure
Reviewed in Australia on 8 October 2021
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Klara and the Sun is a lesson in human emotion. Throughout the book you're seeing the world through Klara's naive eyes. Love, motherhood, childhood, and the hard choices a family makes are all seen and interpreted through Klara's robot mind. Some things are left for the reader to interpret but everything else can be inferred from each experience. The book wraps up nicely and leaves you with a lot of messages. The one I took from it was that change is constant throughout life but you need people beside you to get through it.

I thought the book was well written but the author chose to expand and heavily detail out pointless things. Then when something impact up came along, it just felt rushed. It made reading a little tedious. Luckily it wasn't an overly long book. Definitely not my normal read but a welcome change.
One person found this helpful
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Nick_Melbourne
4.0 out of 5 stars A simple tale that needs some realism
Reviewed in Australia on 30 March 2021
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It is a simple tale about Klara, an 'Artificial Friend' - a humanoid robot with consciousness. Due to a lack of knowledge and understanding about people and the world, she subscribes to some endearing primitive beliefs, much like early humans did thousands of years ago. There are some underlying themes about pollution and human behaviour in the book that do not really come through for me. The book is a pleasant read but I would have preferred it to be a little more realistic. For example, we get some intriguing hints about Klara's vision but what the reader and Klara discover about her internal structure at a crucial stage in the book is plain ridiculous.
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Anje Francis
1.0 out of 5 stars Klara and the sun.
Reviewed in Australia on 23 May 2021
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This book seems to lack both plot and human protagonists. The main “take” is that nothing is as it seems and the main conclusion from that is that there is no beginning, no end and no story. Lots of inexplicable events occur. The landscape is transient, polluted and insubstantial. The only likeable “ being” in this book is Klara, the robot. Emotions displayed by the real humans seem mostly robotic. This novelist has been just rather too clever as the whole “structure” of the novel, just like the existence of the robot collapses in on itself. Most of the action is ephemeral like the blurred in colours on a wet painting. Themes central to an understanding of relationships in this book, like the all - important “lifting” are never explained. The only theme I could find was one of constant, inexplicable transience. Could find no “meaning” in this transient robotic view of life, unless it is the fiendish, amorality of some scientists and their inventions.
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Ralph Monley
4.0 out of 5 stars AI from the inside
Reviewed in Australia on 6 September 2021
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This book makes the creative leap to the subjective perspective of an AI friend android as it comes to life in the shop, observing the world from the storefront window, while noticing individual differences with its companion robot. Then follows the pairing with a young human and life in their home, through to a later poignantly sad post relationship stage. Understated yet moving.
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Doug
5.0 out of 5 stars Dreamy android philosophising
Reviewed in Australia on 28 May 2021
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Ishiguro takes us into the mind of an Android in a poetic imagining of what it is to be human, as interpreted through the eyes of a robot. Filled with a naive charm, the book is narrated by Klara who comes into being to be an artificial friend for her teen companion Josie. I found the book compelling as you glimpse a familiar yet unfamiliar future world through the eyes of one who is also limited in their understanding and context. It’s lyrical, poetic and moving, with Kazuo’s trademark dreamy style. It asks profound questions in a way that remains natural and not didactic.
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Wide Eyes, Big Ears!
TOP 500 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful and thoughtful writing with an intense, melancholic mood!
Reviewed in Australia on 23 September 2021
Klara is an Artificial Friend (AF), a companion robot created for lonely children whose parents can afford the hefty price tag. Klara is bought by Josie, a sweet but sickly girl who has been ‘lifted’ - given a genetic intelligence enhancement which runs the risk of ongoing health problems. Being solar-powered, Klara views the Sun as a gracious benefactor with healing properties and she appeals to the Sun to heal Josie. There are many rich themes in this dystopian speculative story, including: the role and ethics of technology in society; the nature of personhood and love; and the qualities we should value in each other. Klara narrates with impressive memory and observational ability, and touching naïveté - in some ways she is the faithful family dog, ever loyal, sometimes causing harm but never intentionally, receiving the occasional angry kick. While the writing is beautiful and I loved the experience, it is intense and melancholic - the story’s creeping dystopia made it hard to relax. The audio narrator, Sura Siu, captured Klara’s warm but careful tone perfectly.
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From other countries

Archy
3.0 out of 5 stars Sometimes fascinating, sometimes dull
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 March 2021
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Tales of androids / robots / Artificial Friends (in this case) showing empathy and perception towards humans are nothing new. Philip K Dick's We can build you, with its Abraham Lincoln simulacra, was half a century back, for example. Being Ishiguru this is dealt with in far more literary prose, but it still plods along in quite a dull fashion much of the time.

Plotwise, the narrator is Klara, an AF (Artificial Friend) to the teenage Josie, who lives an isolated life, aside from neighbour and potential boyfriend Rick, out in the country. She's is suffering from an illness whose cause is not really made specific. In fact in this dystopian future quite a number of things are not quite clear for much of the book. (What, for example, is the pollution spewing Cooting Machine?) Anyway, Klara's job is to observe and learn about Klara, and this she does, though her observations do become rather tiresome after a while. And I'm afraid the huge error she makes in regard to the Sun is simply, for me, not believable for one so otherwise intelligent. And the anti-climatic ending, while poignant, I found unsatisfying.

I kept going with this because it was Kazuo Ishiguru and does contain some fine passages, but it was a bit disappointing really.
90 people found this helpful
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M.H.
3.0 out of 5 stars An okay read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 March 2021
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I am glad that I read this novel, although I am really not sure what the hype was about. It was okay. I enjoyed the first part of the book and the perspective of Klara (a robot) relaying her sights and impressions of life outside the shop window of a busy high street store. I couldn't emotionally connect to any of the characters and found them lifeless, empty and superficial. This could be intentional, and reflecting the narrative viewpoint of the robot (i.e. the limited ability of a robot to fully connect with humans), but I felt this world, and its inhabitants were flat, devoid of real emotions, so that I was fully detached by the end. I wasn't challenged by the themes, and if I was a 13 year old once more, I may have felt the same way. With saying that, it has now been several days since I have finished the novel and my mind does keep returning to it. I cannot think about the sun in the same way, so I guess it has made an impression on me. I just wanted a bit more: realism, detail, explanation of the dystopian world it was set in; character depth, more explicit moral discussion. I feel somewhat empty. I honestly feel gutted not to love this book like some other readers have done.
69 people found this helpful
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Aleydis
5.0 out of 5 stars Quietly Brilliant and Very Moving
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 March 2021
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Almost unbearably moving in places. Klara is a machine: she talks rather oddly and she sees in tessellated fragments that only coalesce into a rational view of her surroundings as she learns to understand them. Yet Ishiguro’s robot, or Artificial Friend, was still able to move me to tears. She is unconditionally good, even when cruelly used. A novel about love and loving, and the complex interplay of emotions that makes us human, but also a novel about the nature of faith and of good and evil in a dystopian near future.
37 people found this helpful
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Dr B.
1.0 out of 5 stars A great disappointment
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 March 2021
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Having read The Remains of the Day, I had high expectations of this book. But I was very much disappointed. It is written through the eyes of the Alpha robot and the language is very simplistic and naive. The theme that runs through the book is the attempted rescue, by the robot, of the robot's teenage companion from a slowly approaching death, supposedly through the agency of the sun, which seems to have some almost mystical significance for the robot. It all seems quite implausible. Perhaps because the robot is narrating the story, there is little character development amongst the main characters. I thought it might be an allegorical tale, but I was left wondering at the end what points the story was trying to make. The impression I was left with was, "Emperor's New Clothes".
23 people found this helpful
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