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Kazuo Ishiguro |
Those who are considered great
writers don’t usually dedicate part of their efforts to science
fiction. This genre has traditionally been considered second-rate, despite the
fact that some prestigious authors have occasionally engaged on it.
In this context, the most cited work is Brave New
World, by Aldous Huxley (1932), a book I have talked about in previous
posts in this blog.
But there has been a recent foray into
this genre, by no less than a Nobel Prize winner for Literature. Kazuo
Ishiguro, who writes in English and received the award in 2017, is well known
for works such as The Remains of the Day,
or An Artist of the Floating World,
plus his science-fiction novel, Never Let Me Go,
a dystopia along the same lines as Corinna Turner's I am Margaret, which I mentioned in my post
on dystopias in this blog. Now, in 2021, he has published a science fiction
novel that touches on the theme of strong artificial intelligence.