Japanese-born British novelist. His novel
An Artist of the Floating World won the 1986 Whitbread Prize, and
The Remains of the Day, about an English butler coming to realize the extent of his self-sacrifice and self-deception, won the 1989 Booker Prize and was made into a successful film in 1993. His works, which are characterized by a sensitive style and subtle structure, also include
The Unconsoled (1995),
When We Were Orphans (2000), and
Never Let Me Go (2005), the latter two of which were shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
Ishiguro moved with his family to England in 1960 and worked briefly as a social worker. He attended the creative writing course established by the late Malcolm
Bradbury and Angus
Wilson at the University of East Anglia 197980. His first novel,
A Pale View of Hills (1982), takes place mainly in his native Nagasaki, dealing obliquely with the aftermath of the atom bomb.
An Artist of the Floating World is set entirely in Japan but thematically linked to
The Remains of the Day. All three have in common a melancholy reassessment of the past.
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