Reading21: Never Let Me Go

Long-time readers know I am trying to widen my exposure to fiction from this century (see here and here ). So, it was inevitable that, sooner or later, I would read Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go. The novel kept popping up on lists of "essential 21st-century novels" that I came across. The Guardian , Time , a bunch of others had it ranked near the top, and I figured it was time to broaden my fiction intake beyond the classics and nonfiction I usually lean toward. But truth be told, the novel left me cold. I didn’t connect with it. I didn’t care what happened to anyone. I didn’t even feel much when the so-called revelations started unfolding. I was waiting for the novel to rise to the occasion, and it never did. The story follows a clone (although you don't know it in the beginning) named Kathy H. who grows up in a strange, cloistered boarding school called Hailsham, where students are encouraged to produce art and stay in line, all under a cloud of unspoken rules an...