A Pale View of Hills explained

A Pale View of Hills
Author:Kazuo Ishiguro
Country:England
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Faber and Faber
Release Date:February 1982
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:192 pp (hardback first edition)
Isbn:0-571-11866-6
Isbn Note:(hardback first edition)
Oclc:8303689
Followed By:An Artist of the Floating World

A Pale View of Hills (1982) is the first novel by Nobel Prize–winning author Kazuo Ishiguro. It won the 1982 Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize. He received a £1000 advance from publishers Faber and Faber for the novel after a meeting with Robert McCrum, the fiction editor.[1]

A Pale View of Hills is the story of Etsuko, a middle-aged Japanese woman living alone in England, and opens with discussion between Etsuko and her younger daughter, Niki, about the recent suicide of Etsuko's older daughter, Keiko.

Plot summary

During a visit from her daughter, Niki, Etsuko reflects on her own life as a young woman in Japan, and how she left that country to live in England. As she describes it, she and her Japanese husband, Jiro, had a daughter together, and a few years later Etsuko met a British man and moved with him to England. She took her elder daughter, Keiko, to England to live with her and the new husband. When Etsuko and her new husband have a daughter, Etsuko wants to call her something "modern" and her husband wants an Eastern-sounding name, so they compromise with the name "Niki", which seems to Etsuko to be perfectly British, but sounds to her husband at least slightly Japanese.

In England, Keiko becomes increasingly solitary and antisocial. Etsuko recalls how, as Keiko grew older, she would lock herself in her room and emerge only to pick up the dinner-plate that her mother would leave for her in the kitchen. This disturbing behavior ends, as the reader already has learned, in Keiko's suicide. "Your father," Etsuko tells Niki, "was rather idealistic at times...[H]e really believed we could give her a happy life over here... But you see, Niki, I knew all along. I knew all along she wouldn't be happy over here."[2]

Etsuko tells her daughter, Niki, that she had a friend in Japan named Sachiko. Sachiko had a daughter named Mariko, a girl whom Etsuko's memory paints as exceptionally solitary and antisocial. Sachiko, Etsuko recalls, had planned to take Mariko to America with an American soldier identified only as "Frank". Clearly, Sachiko's story bears striking similarities to Etsuko's.

Characters

Reception

The novel was generally well received by critics, many praising the novel's mysterious tone. The New York Review of Books called it "eery and tenebrous. It is a ghost story but the narrator does not realise that."[3] The New York Times said the novel was "infinitely ... mysterious", and the inconsistent tone of the narrator, with the graphic imagery in the book combined to create "the absolute emblem of our genius of destruction".[4]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Living memories . The Guardian . Nicholas Wroe . 19 February 2005 . 27 June 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100525015739/http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/feb/19/fiction.kazuoishiguro. 25 May 2010 . live.
  2. Kazuo Ishiguro, A Pale View of Hills, pp.176
  3. News: On the High Wire. Annan. Gabriele. The New York Review of Books. 2018-11-07. en-US.
  4. News: IN A JAPAN LIKE LIMBO. The New York Times . 9 May 1982 . 2018-11-07. en.