I read The Remains of the Day because I was inspired by an interview with the author following him receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature. Ishiguro sounded like such a thoughtful, collected character. In short, I liked him as a person and wanted to find out more about him as a writer.
In The Remains of the Day, Stevens takes respite from his butler’s duty to undertake a short excursion into West Country to visit Miss Kenton, a woman who once worked with him as Lord Darlington’s housekeeper. On his travels, he reminisces about his life dedicated to serving his master, proudly and faithfully and, somewhat on the margin, about the ups and downs of his volatile relations with Miss Kenton, about his father and about tiny life in the grander scheme of things.
The mastery of this book lies in how Ishiguro manages to superimpose Stevens’s ordinary, little-man’s life onto the bigger picture of the malfunctioning class system and the politics of appeasement preceding the outbreak of WW2. Or perhaps, it is the wheel of history that is superimposed on Stevens’s life. The distinction isn’t clear. None of them seem to be favoured by the author as more significant. Stevens narrates the story and to him the detail of everyday etiquette and silver-polishing is equally important as Lord Darlington’s anti-Semitic antics and top-secret meetings with influential politicians. Stevens’s loyalty is to his job. It takes precedence of his own father, over his undoubtedly deep but supressed feelings for Miss Kenton and over his better judgment in relation to Lord Darlington’s treacherous politics.
Ishiguro has captured Stevens perfectly: through his tone, his language, his actions. Stevens is more aristocratic than the lords he is serving; he is more dignified, more stiff-upper-lip. His little holiday exposes him to the world at large and the reader watches him squirm on the hook of the unwelcome reality from which he has been detached for the best part of his life. Yet, despite his aloofness and dogged devotion to a rotten aristocrat, one finds him very human, very fallible and very worthy of having his own say before the day is up.

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The Remains of the Day (Engelska) Pocketbok – 5 April 2001
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Kazuo Ishiguro
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Produktinformation
- Utgivare : Faber & Faber; 1:a utgåvan (5 April 2001)
- Språk : Engelska
- Pocketbok : 272 sidor
- ISBN-10 : 0571200737
- ISBN-13 : 978-0571200733
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#24,815 i Böcker (Visa Topp 100 i Böcker)
- #50 i Biografisk fiktion
- #190 i Europeisk litteratur
- #609 i Klassisk litteratur och fiktion
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Bookmarked Reviews
5,0 av 5 stjärnor
A study of Englishness
Granskad i Storbritannien den 2 april 2018Verifierat köp
67 människor tyckte detta var till hjälp
Rapportera missbruk
Översätt omdöme till Svenska

Kanwar Anand
5,0 av 5 stjärnor
A STUNNING DONWTON ABBEY'ESQUE MEMOIR.
Granskad i Indien den 16 januari 2018Verifierat köp
THE REMAINS OF THE DAY BY KAZUO ISHIGURO
WHAT IS THIS ABOUT? It's about the dying generation of butlers. You meet the most amazing humane, perfectly mannered, sensible, sensitive butler ever. He talks about incidents that took place in his life.
Judging by the name of the author, I thought I would have to read a book based on Japan and Japanese culture. I have read a few other books based on Japan so I was ok with the idea. However, it began and I found myself in a completely different place altogether. You see I found myself reading a memoir of a most exquisite specimen. The gentleman in question is one of a kind. His voice, his thoughts, his sweet-nothing observations are some to behold. Never does he ever judge, ridicule or look down upon on anybody. His vocation is singular and his quest in life is simple. It is to serve his lordship (or lord) to whom he has made available his services as a butler.
The book is set in a travail lasting for four days. In these four days the protagonist is driving through Britain. He makes various stops in cottages, inns and recalls his days by writing about them. I was astonished at how perfectly delightful and marvellous the writing style is.
WHO SHOULD READ IT?
If you enjoy a good memoir. One that leaves you feeling a bit nostalgic over someone else's past. Or if you enjoyed reading "SENSE OF AN ENDING" by Julian Barnes, you ought to read this book.
Why should you read it?
The English, the lovely writing, the stories, the greenery you will envision, the legends of a world lost but not forgotten somehow made to come back to life by a stunning dictation.
Similar books?
Sense of an ending by Julian Barnes
& My name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
OVERALL? Of every 20 books I read I give maybe 3 books five stars. Not just that I would go on to say this is one of the best books I've ever had the pleasure of reading. The kind of book that reminded me of why I read in the first place. What a story, what a narration, what a character, what a protagonist.
WHAT IS THIS ABOUT? It's about the dying generation of butlers. You meet the most amazing humane, perfectly mannered, sensible, sensitive butler ever. He talks about incidents that took place in his life.
Judging by the name of the author, I thought I would have to read a book based on Japan and Japanese culture. I have read a few other books based on Japan so I was ok with the idea. However, it began and I found myself in a completely different place altogether. You see I found myself reading a memoir of a most exquisite specimen. The gentleman in question is one of a kind. His voice, his thoughts, his sweet-nothing observations are some to behold. Never does he ever judge, ridicule or look down upon on anybody. His vocation is singular and his quest in life is simple. It is to serve his lordship (or lord) to whom he has made available his services as a butler.
The book is set in a travail lasting for four days. In these four days the protagonist is driving through Britain. He makes various stops in cottages, inns and recalls his days by writing about them. I was astonished at how perfectly delightful and marvellous the writing style is.
WHO SHOULD READ IT?
If you enjoy a good memoir. One that leaves you feeling a bit nostalgic over someone else's past. Or if you enjoyed reading "SENSE OF AN ENDING" by Julian Barnes, you ought to read this book.
Why should you read it?
The English, the lovely writing, the stories, the greenery you will envision, the legends of a world lost but not forgotten somehow made to come back to life by a stunning dictation.
Similar books?
Sense of an ending by Julian Barnes
& My name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
OVERALL? Of every 20 books I read I give maybe 3 books five stars. Not just that I would go on to say this is one of the best books I've ever had the pleasure of reading. The kind of book that reminded me of why I read in the first place. What a story, what a narration, what a character, what a protagonist.

Valderee
5,0 av 5 stjärnor
Hindsight
Granskad i Storbritannien den 5 augusti 2018Verifierat köp
I bought this book after listening to a podcast and becoming intrigued. It's about an English butler's experiences relayed as if to inform, inspire other butlers. He reveals his dedication to service, his high standards, his loyalty to his employers and his personal sacrifices. A very clever book which slowly reveals other interpretations and misunderstandings which have led to missed chances of personal happiness, all told within a period of historical turmoil and political upheaval. As a reader you cringe and wince for Mr Stevens, such a dignified, repressed man and for the housekeeper, Miss Kenton. The writing is so skilled - my blood boiled for her.

Steve Wilson
3,0 av 5 stjärnor
Upper Class British society's answer to First Officer Spock
Granskad i Storbritannien den 25 november 2018Verifierat köp
Kazuo Ishiguro is an excellent writer, of that there can be no doubt. Prior to reading The Remains Of The Day, I have read Nocturnes and The Unconsoled. The first title Nocturnes is an interesting collection of short stories. In the Unconsoled, the protagonist is an indecisive classical pianist, who despite his shortcomings is a quite likeable character.
Prior to Vulcan Dr Spock of the USS Enterprise, who was devoid of human emotion and was motivated by logic, the class-ridden social cesspit of aristocratic England was populated with overlords and their underlings including the likes of butler Stevens of Darlington House, who seems almost equally lacking in human emotion and is motivated not by logic, but by what he rather delusionally refers to as "dignity".
In comparison to Kazuo's later book, The Unconsoled, this book's main character Stevens is rather more tragic. His main failing that came across to me is that he takes himself, his work and his position in the world far too seriously. Consequently one is left to feel a mixture of sadness, ridicule (at times) and yet sympathy towards him, because he is emotionally very stunted and ironically quite naive about the world unfolding out there around him.
Although this is a work of fiction, I have come across a handful of people in real life who suffer from very similar personality problems and other social disadvantages at Kazuo Ishiguro's butler Mr Stevens. Note that the kind of problems I'm talking about are definitely NOT mental illnesses, serious personality disorders, lack of IQ or developmental problems such as Autism, ADHD or suchlike.
In reading this book, it is very easy for me to imagine people like Stevens being real, especially prior to about the early 1980s. I'm sure there were many tragic cases with many similarities to butler Stevens during the early and middle years of the 20th century. I found Stevens to be a mildly delusional and rather tragic character.
Ishiguro has either/and/or a terrific imagination, has known of such people and situations, or done his research very thoroughly to capture the essence, atmosphere, time and location of isolated "Grand Houses", their owners and some of their staff in England in the 20th century.
I give this book only three stars because I feel that the main character does not develop as someone of interest in the story, and the ending, whilst typical of Kazuo Ishiguro's works, is rather disappointing from the reader's point of view with respect to the protagonist.
Prior to Vulcan Dr Spock of the USS Enterprise, who was devoid of human emotion and was motivated by logic, the class-ridden social cesspit of aristocratic England was populated with overlords and their underlings including the likes of butler Stevens of Darlington House, who seems almost equally lacking in human emotion and is motivated not by logic, but by what he rather delusionally refers to as "dignity".
In comparison to Kazuo's later book, The Unconsoled, this book's main character Stevens is rather more tragic. His main failing that came across to me is that he takes himself, his work and his position in the world far too seriously. Consequently one is left to feel a mixture of sadness, ridicule (at times) and yet sympathy towards him, because he is emotionally very stunted and ironically quite naive about the world unfolding out there around him.
Although this is a work of fiction, I have come across a handful of people in real life who suffer from very similar personality problems and other social disadvantages at Kazuo Ishiguro's butler Mr Stevens. Note that the kind of problems I'm talking about are definitely NOT mental illnesses, serious personality disorders, lack of IQ or developmental problems such as Autism, ADHD or suchlike.
In reading this book, it is very easy for me to imagine people like Stevens being real, especially prior to about the early 1980s. I'm sure there were many tragic cases with many similarities to butler Stevens during the early and middle years of the 20th century. I found Stevens to be a mildly delusional and rather tragic character.
Ishiguro has either/and/or a terrific imagination, has known of such people and situations, or done his research very thoroughly to capture the essence, atmosphere, time and location of isolated "Grand Houses", their owners and some of their staff in England in the 20th century.
I give this book only three stars because I feel that the main character does not develop as someone of interest in the story, and the ending, whilst typical of Kazuo Ishiguro's works, is rather disappointing from the reader's point of view with respect to the protagonist.

markr
5,0 av 5 stjärnor
A great novel - full of pathos for missed opportunities
Granskad i Storbritannien den 1 december 2017Verifierat köp
This is a stunning evocation of 1950's England through the recollections a a butler in a grand house. The butler, Stevens, has learned to keep his emotions so in check that he misses the key moments in his life, and the book is full of pathos for the lost opportunities. As always with Kazuo Ishiguro the writing is superb - it creates so many images in the mind's eye you can lose yourself utterly in a bygone ( thank goodness) world
Superb
Superb