Kazuo Ishiguro
Kazuo Ishiguro is a Japanese-born British novelist, born on November 8, 1954, in Nagasaki, Japan, who moved to England with his family in 1960 at age five. He studied English and philosophy at the University of Kent and earned an MA in creative writing from the University of East Anglia, launching a career marked by novels like 'The Remains of the Day' (Booker Prize, 1989) and 'Never Let Me Go.' In 2017, he received the Nobel Prize in Literature for works uncovering the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world.[1][2][3]
Literary Fiction
Science Fiction
Historical Fiction
A Pale View of Hills
Never Let Me Go
The Remains of the Day
The Buried Giant
Never Let Me Go
Never Let Me Go
The Buried Giant
Never Let Me Go
The Buried Giant: A novel
The Remains of the Day
The Remains of the Day
An Artist of the Floating World
Never Let Me Go
When We Were Orphans: A Novel
The Remains of the Day
The Buried Giant: A novel
Never Let Me Go (Vintage International)
An Artist of the Floating World (Penguin Drop Caps)
Never Let Me Go
Nocturnes
The Buried Giant: A novel
The Remains of the Day
Nunca me abandones (Vintage Espanol) (Spanish Edition)
My Twentieth Century Evening and Other Small Breakthroughs: The Nobel Lecture