A Pale View of Hills - Kazuo Ishiguro
I've only just finished this book, and it has my mind ticking over, so I should probably leave it a while before writing a review. However, as it's getting towards the end of the year, and I have too many things to do, if I don't write about it now I probably never will.
Etsuko is a Japanese woman, living in England. She has two daughters, and right from the start we learn one of her daughters recently committed suicide. Her other daughter is staying with her at the moment, and this triggers a reminiscing back to Japan when she had a brief friendship with a woman named Satchiko, and her daughter, Mariko.
I'm very confused by this book. There is so much more to this story than I have picked up on a first reading. It is wonderfully written, very atmospheric and almost poetic, but with a very subtle hint of 'something very dark and malevolent'. I can't put my finger on it, but everything just seemed slightly off-centre....the characters, and their interactions and conversations. But it was all done so subtly that I wonder if it's my interpretation that is making it seem darker than it really is. I kind of got the feeling I was reading a ghost story, even though I know that's not the case. Reading online reviews, I see I'm not the only one who is left a bit confused (and intrigued) by this book.
The ending is very interesting, but doesn't tie any loose ends up. I think the author wants people to draw their own conclusions, so he has written it in such a way that it is left open to interpretation. A very clever book, and one that will stay with me for a while I think.
5/5