When We Were Orphans

by Kazuo Ishiguro | Literature & Fiction |
ISBN: 0375724400 Global Overview for this book
Registered by DSM of Forestville, Michigan USA on 3/17/2003
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2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by DSM from Forestville, Michigan USA on Monday, March 17, 2003
This book was an easy read. I enjoyed it up until the last couple chapters. I felt it was a bit 'overdone' at that point. But still, a decent read.

From Amazon.com
When 9-year-old Christopher Banks's father--a British businessman involved in the opium trade--disappears from the family home in Shanghai, the boy and his friend Akira play at being detectives: "Until in the end, after the chases, fist-fights and gun-battles around the warren-like alleys of the Chinese districts, whatever our variations and elaborations, our narratives would always conclude with a magnificent ceremony held in Jessfield Park, a ceremony that would see us, one after another, step out onto a specially erected stage ... to greet the vast cheering crowds."
But Christopher's mother also disappears, and he is sent to live in England, where he grows up in the years between the world wars to become, he claims, a famous detective. His family's fate continues to haunt him, however, and he sifts through his memories to try to make sense of his loss. Finally, in the late 1930s, he returns to Shanghai to solve the most important case of his life. But as Christopher pursues his investigation, the boundaries between fact and fantasy begin to evaporate. Is the Japanese soldier he meets really Akira? Are his parents really being held in a house in the Chinese district? And who is Mr. Grayson, the British official who seems to be planning an important celebration? "My first question, sir, before anything else, is if you're happy with the choice of Jessfield Park for the ceremony? We will, you see, require substantial space."

In When We Were Orphans Kazuo Ishiguro uses the conventions of crime fiction to create a moving portrait of a troubled mind, and of a man who cannot escape the long shadows cast by childhood trauma. Sherlock Holmes needed only fragments--a muddy shoe, cigarette ash on a sleeve--to make his deductions, but all Christopher has are fading recollections of long-ago events, and for him the truth is much harder to grasp. Ishiguro writes in the first person, but from the beginning there are cracks in Christopher's carefully restrained prose, suggestions that his version of the world may not be the most reliable. Faced with such a narrator, the reader is forced to become a detective too, chasing crumbs of truth through the labyrinth of Christopher's memory.

Ishiguro has never been one for verbal pyrotechnics, but the unruffled surface of this haunting novel only adds to its emotional power. When We Were Orphans is an extraordinary feat of sustained, perfectly controlled imagination, and in Christopher Banks the author has created one of his most memorable characters. --Simon Leake



Journal Entry 2 by DSM at Post Office in Bad Axe, Michigan USA on Sunday, September 7, 2003
Release planned for Wednesday, September 10, 2003 at Post Office in Bad Axe, Michigan USA.

Sending to Beachglass for The Grapes of Wrath

Journal Entry 3 by beachglass from Fresno, California USA on Friday, September 19, 2003
Just received in the mail from DSM...thanks for the trades! :-)

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