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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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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.
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Vin
2.0 out of 5 stars Just plain dull
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 March 2021
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The pace is glacial. The central character is an 'Artificial Friend' designed to be a companion to a child - in this case, Josie who has an unpsecified life-threatening illness. What I couldn't buy into was how such a sophisticated 'machine' could be so naive and repeatedly misread the world around it. For example, Klara forms a theory that she can ask the sun to heal Josie - presumably based on the knowledge that she is herself solar-powered. Did the AF developers blow all the money on the body and forget the intelligence? For me, that is the greatest flaw in the plot and the rest of the story collapses around it. There is Josie's friend, Rick, who has not been 'lifted' - in other words, genetically modified along with all other children to increase his intelligence. But he is naturally talented without it. We never learn why his mother refused the treatment. There's a lot we never learn. Add that to paper-thin characterisation and a glacial pace and you get an insubstantial novel. Klara's ending could be a starting point for a sequel, but please don't.
16 people found this helpful
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P. G. Harris
2.0 out of 5 stars Very good writer writes poor work of speculative fiction
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 1 September 2021
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One of the greatest challenges for any writer must be to persuade the reader to suspend disbelief. For the wrier of speculative fiction, that challenge is even greater, given the fact that his/her starting point is, by definition, fantastical. That, for me, is where Ishiguro falls down as an author. When it comes to realist fiction, he is fully deserving of his Nobel prize. Remains of the Day is an undoubted classic, and I have a particular love for his short story collection, Nocturnes. On the other hand, I just couldn’t buy into the central concept of Never Let Me Go - organs being harvested from cloned humans, and I found Klara and the Sun even less engaging. At least with the earlier book, there is a single big indigestible idea, here there are frequent nudges which took me out of the story

The story is told from the viewpoint of Klara, a solar powered robot designed as a companion for children and adolescents. We first meet her in a department store where she is reaching conclusions about the world by observing it through the shop window. Right from the start there are aspects of the novel which snap the strings suspending credulity. They may be small things, but a staggeringly complex solar powered robot can potentially become dangerous if its charge falls, yet no one thought to insert a mains charger. More pertinently, a solar powered robot sophisticated enough to under stand emotions doesn’t know what the sun is and builds a religion around it. Without that whacking great anomaly, the book wouldn’t exist. As an aside, if you’d like a more engaging tale about robots drawing the wrong conclusions from their observations and consequently developing a religion, i’d recommend Asimov’s short story Reason.

Eventually Klara is chosen by the adolescent Josie and goes to live with her, where she has to deal with a hostile housekeeper, Josie’s mystery illness, the fraught relationship with an estranged father, and a burgeoning relationship with a less privileged boy. The things the second section asks the reader to swallow include a genetic treatment with a significant probability of proving fatal being legally administered to young people with the full consent of their parents, and parents planning the replacement of their children in the event of the therapy going wrong.

So, this didn’t work for me as a work of speculative fiction primarily because I just didn’t find people’s actions credible. I’ve said this before in reviews, a fantastical story can work if it remains true to its own internal logic and people’s reactions to what is happening around them continue to be credible. It is on these points , particularly the latter, that Klara and the Sun fails. I found myself thinking about Animal Farm. Why am I prepared to accept talking farm animals but not the ever-so humble Klara? I think that comes down to the fact that Orwell’s work is so obviously an allegory, a satirical fantasy (Ishiguro’s realistic style works against him here), and because the actions of the animals are credible within their own context.

Does, then, Klara work as an allegory? Well if that is the intention, its a bit thin. The messages seem to be that pushy parents can damage their children, that private education is divisive, and that young love can be profound but transient.

To be fair there were two points where I was ready to give in because they were too preposterous, but where Ishiguro proved to be cleverer than I gave him creit. Firstly, nobody ever asks Klara why she is doing what she does. If they did, they’d tell her she was being ridiculous and whole chunks of the plot would fall apart. Secondly a professional engineer appears to help Klara to commit criminal damage toa piece of civil engineering machinery. Eventually, when seen from a perspective other than Klara’s, the former is result of someone knowingly humouring her, the latter involves someone working to a completely different agenda.

Overall, I didn’t find the plot particularly well put together. Klara is in a store. Klara gets bought. Klara (and the reader) learns a bunch of stuff about her new family and the world they inhabit. There is a stonking great coincidence which resolves the main jeopardy of the book, then everything just Peters out.

A great deal of sound and fury, signifying less than things which Asimov and Philip K Dick said over 50 years ago. This is a not very good book by a very good author.
9 people found this helpful
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El
3.0 out of 5 stars Underwhelming and leaves you with a lot of questions
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 March 2021
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I'm wavering between 3 or 4 stars but I think it's fairer to go with 3 as I'm not about to heap praise on this book. I'm not sure if I've just read the same book as other reviews describing it as incomparable and a masterpiece.

The central character is Klara, an AF robot who initially is in a shop with other AF robots awaiting an owner. I enjoyed this part of the story, reading Klara learning about the outside world through observing the daily life and interactions of the world outside the shop window was fascinating. After a while Klara is chosen by Josie and she starts her new life with Josie and her family. Josie has a life threatening illness which is a central part of the storyline but is never named or described in much detail other than she gets weak and tired frequently. I don't want to give away too many spoilers for those who have yet to read the book so I won't mention the secondary plot line running through the book focusing more on AF technology and it's capabilities but the primary plot (and title of the book) refers to Klara's belief that the sun can heal Josie.

There's a touch of 1984 about it, with themes such as drone technology and surveillance and artificial intelligence. It was done with subtlety and alludes to how technologies such as those slowly creep in and take over. Additionally I think at its heart it is a book about human nature and the human heart.

However I'm left with so many unanswered questions that I'm disappointed. For example what exactly are lifted children, how do you become lifted? (it's very briefly explained but with no detail) and why did Rick's Mother choose not to lift him? I'd have liked further description of the world that they live in but very little was said, the reader discovers things when Klara does because the book is set from her perspective but as she never ventures far from the family home the reader never learns of the wider world. It is alluded to that there are segregations between AF's and humans in other neighbourhoods but again it is never explained further. Finally without giving anything away I found the ending implausible.

It's an interesting read but it didn't make me want to keep reading. The author writes beautifully, that is one of the prominent features of this book and it is easy to see how Ishiguro has been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature but I am left with too many criticisms to award it a higher rating.
6 people found this helpful
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Mick
3.0 out of 5 stars Channelling her inner butler
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 June 2022
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Most of it was quite an enjoyable read. But it is not a wholly successful book. The main problem is if Klara is a machine, how could she replicate a human identity entirely? This leads to the big what-is-human-identity question, I know, but lots of writers handle it better. A robot who could come up with the whole sun-and-barn nonsense is not a good candidate to replace Josie.

When Klara was telling us about the need to learn about this and that, I thought, all this sounds a bit familiar - and of course it's the BUTLER! Klara is channelling her inner butler! I'm beginning to think that Ishiguro is one of those writers who write one realy good book and then go on and on and on with variations on the same theme.

It was all ok reading until about three quarters of the way through and the visit to New York (I think) that became quite excruciating - clunky plot line, never explained to a character who would want to know, of disabling something, whose purpose is never explained, and then a recourse to soap opera personal problem belaboring.

I take note of all the anomalies like a few SF details in an otherwise contemporary setting. One thing other reviewers haven't mentioned, is how coy and quiet Ishiguro is about sex. What would adolescents do with AFs? Perhaps that's who they like Ishiguro so much in school.
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Raymo
3.0 out of 5 stars It doesn't work for me
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 March 2021
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I've read and enjoyed 2 other of Mr. Ishiguru's books - Remains of the day and Never let me go. The Sunday Times considers Klara to be a ""masterpiece" . Really ? After a pretty good start the writing/storytelling becomes unconvincing . The dystopian -type society is confusing and poorly explained - Josie's Da is in a commune under attack from unknown forces but the author provides no depth to why or what is happening ; can the author not tell us what precisely is the Cootings machine with 3 funnels and its purpose in spewing pollution into the atmosphere ; schooling for Josie and her friend Rick seems to be a problem but isn't that always the case ; making friends and schoolchildren's behaviour are both presented as other problems but again nothing really new there . Instead of developing the theme of living in what appears to be a dystopian/ A.I. society unfortunately the book concentrates throughout on mundane conversations heard by Klara but these conversations appear to me as mere padding serving no useful purpose in propelling the story-line ( the author may argue the conversations are meant to be useful in showing Klara's development as Josie's friend - O.K. fair enough but has the author no consideration for the reader who has to read all this trivia throughout the book? ) The ending is unconvincing - Klara thought she had to agree a quid pro quo with the sun on the first occasion then how did she manage to get away without a quid pro quo on the second occasion ? - Would it not have been a much better ending had she , on the second occasion , agreed a quid pro quo by ( say ) becoming a Jesus-type sacrificial lamb in return for Josie's life ? - Had this been done then I might have felt real empathy for Klara's demise. Instead the author leaves her alone and stranded " on the shelf " with her faculties in a state of decline much like what happens we humans as we age - Hardly an inspiring ending !

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Euphemia Black
3.0 out of 5 stars A dystopian vision
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 3 September 2021
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Ishiguro is a briliant author who explores interesting themes. This one is a set in a dystopian future where androids are AFs, or artificial friends, to young people. Some children are genetically modified and others are not, like Josie, who is suffering from a serious illness which might kill her. Klara the AF's perception of human behaviour is faulty and her idea of the sun and its healing powers is the title and basis of this story. I thought this was dull in parts and we are left to guess much as nothing is explained, unlike Never Let Me Go when the truth dawns on the reader at the same time as the characters. "Klara" has a similar atmosphere but is not as satisfying. I don't think it wil make the Booker shortlist.
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D. O'Reilly
3.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking at times
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 May 2022
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This is an unusual tale that started quite well, for me, and slowly became predictable and unsatisfying with its conclusion. I think it's meant to serve as a bit of a treatise on the human condition. And this condition is held up and compared through a number of Characters, not least of all Josie. The human characters are weighed against the artificial being, Klara, who, throughout the book, behaves in a more human way than the humans. Frequently she seems more morally grounded and driven to act in the most altruistic manner. The premise of the book is that she is the artificial being that occupies its pages. But, by the end of the read, that doesn't feel like the case. She has been the lifeblood of the tale and, perhaps, more real than anybody else.
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HEATHER VAN RIESEN
2.0 out of 5 stars What???
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 October 2021
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Am I really thick or does this book make no sense? I get that they were trying to replicate the very ill Josie but ???? I loved Remains of The Day and Never Let Me Go but this book made me feel stupid for not getting it!
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L King
3.0 out of 5 stars Not really my cup of tea
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 May 2021
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This genre/book just wasn't really my cup of tea. I read it for our book group. It certainly was a bit different which is what I liked about it and I thought it clever the way it viewed the world from the perspective of an android. One part I particularly liked was the exchange with Melania Housekeeper before Klara and Josie were going to visit Mr Capaldi
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