9780679735878
The Unconsoled share button
Kazuo Ishiguro
Format Paperback
Dimensions 5.17 (w) x 8.00 (h) x 1.07 (d)
Pages 544
Publisher Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication Date October 1996
ISBN 9780679735878
Book ISBN 10 0679735879
About Book

The Unconsoled is at once a gripping psychological mystery, a wicked satire of the cult of art, and a poignant character study of a man whose public life has accelerated beyond his control. The setting is a nameless Central European city where Ryder, a renowned pianist, has come to give the most important performance of his life. Instead, he finds himself diverted on a series of cryptic and infuriating errands that nevertheless provide him with vital clues to his own past. In The Unconsoled Ishiguro creates a work that is itself a virtuoso performance, strange, haunting, and resonant with humanity and wit.

"A work of great interest and originality.... Ishiguro has mapped out an aesthetic territory that is all his own...frankly fantastic [and] fiercer and funnier than before."—The New Yorker

From the universally acclaimed author of The Remains of the Day comes a mesmerizing novel of completely unexpected mood and matter--a seamless, fictional universe, both wholly unrecognizable and familiar. When the public, day-to-day reality of a renowned pianist takes on a life of its own, he finds himself traversing landscapes that are by turns eerie, comical, and strangely malleable.

Reviews

Michiko Kakutani

Certainly the philosophical points Mr. Ishiguro wants to make in "The Unconsoled" are important, but they are lost along the way in his dogged, shaggy-dog narrative, a narrative that for all the author's intelligence and craft sorely tries the reader's patience. -- New York Times

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

A renowned pianist finds himself in a mysterious and dreamlike urban maze. (Oct.)

Library Journal

As stylistically distinctive as his acclaimed The Remains of the Day (LJ 10/1/89), Ishiguro's newest work offers a different kind of protagonist. While Remains's butler was at odds with himself (without knowing it), prominent concert pianist Ryder is at odds with his surroundings. Ryder arrives in an unidentified European city at a bit of a loss. Everyone he meets seems to assume that he knows more than he knows, that he is well acquainted with the city and its obscure cultural crisis. A young woman he kindly consents to advise seems to have been an old lover and her son quite possibly his own; he vaguely recalls past conversations. The world he has entered is a surreal, Alice-in-Wonderland place where a door in a cafe can lead back to a hotel miles away. The result is at once dreamy, disorienting, and absolutely compelling; Ishiguro's paragraphs, though Proust-like, are completely lucid and quite addictive to read. Some readers may find that the whole concept grinds too much against logic, but the pleasure here is that Ishiguro doesn't do anything so ordinary as trying to resolve events neatly, instead taking them at face value. Highly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/15/95.]-Barbara Hoffert, ``Library Journal''

From Barnes & Noble

The Booker Prize-winning author of The Remains of the Day enters the realm of the concert pianist in this story of an international artist named Ryder whose public life has taken on a life of its own. "A novel of outstanding breadth and originality..."--Anita Brookner.