Остаток дня

Livre broché, 315 pages

Langue : Russian

Publié 1 juin 2018 par Эксмо.

ISBN :
978-5-699-39016-8
ISBN copié !
Numéro OCLC :
810280273

Voir sur OpenLibrary

(4 critiques)

A compelling portrait of the perfect English butler, who, at the end of his career in postwar England, reviews his life and secretly questions the "greatness" of the nobleman he served.

65 éditions

mundanity and tedium made dramatic

Aucune note

This is the second of Ishiguro's I've read (the other was Klara and the Sun), and I'm struck with how much his characters love to revel in tedium. In this book, it's done to comedic effect often (since the narrator is obsessed with the details of what makes a "good butler" or what counts as "dignity"). But it then surprisingly dips into a love story and Nazi sympathizers. The book is deep in the weeds of something that seems ridiculous while all of these other more important things are happening around the edges. In the end, it works.

a publié une critique de The Remains of the Day par Kazuo Ishiguro (FF Classics)

A deeply sad character study

Avertissement sur le contenu spoilers for the ending

a publié une critique de The Remains of the Day par Kazuo Ishiguro (FF Classics)

Review of 'The Remains of the Day' on 'Storygraph'

I didn't start getting into the story until around the 40% mark and even then, I felt like I had to make myself read it. If it hadn't been a book club pick, it'd probably be a DNF. I'm glad I stuck with it until the end. It was worth it from a literary and historical standpoint. But that ending felt incredibly depressing to me and I'm not sure it was meant to be? Was there meant to be little to no growth of the main character? Did he grow, but my own views are just so vastly different I can't see it? I have a lot of feelings to think about before my book club's discussion. 

Sujets

  • Butlers
  • Fiction
  • Country homes
  • Household employees
  • Social classes
  • History

Lieux

  • England