tippy bottom reviewed 克拉拉与太阳 by Kazuo Ishiguro
Review of '克拉拉与太阳' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
bitter sweet goodness
Hardcover, 392 pages
Chinese language
Published Feb. 28, 2021 by 上海译文出版社.
克拉拉是一个专为陪伴儿童而设计的太阳能人工智能机器人(AF),具有极高的观察、推理与共情能力。她坐在商店展示橱窗里,注视着街头路人以及前来浏览橱窗的孩子们的一举一动。她始终期待着很快就会有人挑中她,不过,当这种永久改变境遇的可能性出现时,克拉拉却被提醒不要过分相信人类的诺言。
在《克拉拉与太阳》这部作品中,石黑一雄通过一位令人难忘的叙述者的视角,观察千变万化的现代社会,探索了一个根本性的问题:究竟什么是爱?
bitter sweet goodness
Ishiguro's novel about a sentient robot is very timely, thought-provoking, and disturbing. My favorite character in this story was definitely Klara, the AF (artificial friend). In some ways, this is a challenging read, since the author does not spell everything out, and there are plenty of details that are not spelled out. Klara's reasoning and sensory clues are well described, however, and the saddest aspect of this story is how much of Klara's knowledge and insights will never be explained or shared with those she cared about most. Like most of those who have been assigned by society to a subservient role, she is vastly underestimated. This is a story that will stay with me, and I do recommend it.
Content warning death, toxic relationships, fascism, white supremacy, general creepiness
I'm trying to figure out how to explain the premise.
The narrator is an "Artificial Friend" a robot made to accompany a child until they move out of their house.
Klara and other AFs are solar-powered, and have superstitions about the Sun being this healing force. they're also pretty anti-pollution.
The story is slow-moving, and I will tell you do NOT skim or get distracted. Kazuo Ishiguro can have some massive paragraphs, skillfully made that make your eyes glaze over if it's a bad time, but it's essential information (though not an info dump). Every time my eyes started skimming, I had to go back and reread because I missed something both subtle and vital.
they keep talking about "lifted children" in the book. It's about genetics (uh oh!). It's not clear to me whether it's like that movie Gattaca where you just make the child artificially with the best DNA possible, or if it's like, Gene Editing.
Anyway, like Gattaca, there is genetic discrimination and that's a big thing in the book.
Just in case it wasn't clear: Kazuo Ishiguro is pretty clear that this is a bad thing.
There's a lot of talk about whether or not AFs can replace humans completely.
It's a nice book, very quiet for the most part. I recommend it.