Snowy
Active Member
I finished Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. I saw the movie a few years ago. The movie follows more or less the same story as in the book.
As I already knew the theme of the book, and the ending, what struck me was how the protagonists seemed to accept their situation, identify with others in the same situation instead of ordinary people, and so easily go along with it. The book presents the story in a mainly understated and matter of factly manner. It's wonderfully chilling and sad.
Anyone on the black pill spectrum after the pandemic will probably agree you can get people to do anything if it is for the science. For black-pillers this book is more a description of a realistic alternative society than pure science fiction. For others it's just a beautifully sad novel.
As I already knew the theme of the book, and the ending, what struck me was how the protagonists seemed to accept their situation, identify with others in the same situation instead of ordinary people, and so easily go along with it. The book presents the story in a mainly understated and matter of factly manner. It's wonderfully chilling and sad.
Anyone on the black pill spectrum after the pandemic will probably agree you can get people to do anything if it is for the science. For black-pillers this book is more a description of a realistic alternative society than pure science fiction. For others it's just a beautifully sad novel.