Review of Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun, Adrian Younge - The American Negro, Springtime in poetry
Kazuo Ishiguro's first novel since his Nobel Prize and knighthood: Klara and the Sun; multimedia artist Adrian Younge's The American Negro; and poetic responses to spring.
Kazuo Ishiguro has just published his eighth novel, the first to be written since he won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017 and was knighted. Klara and the Sun is about an Artificial Friend, a robot whose role is to be a companion to the teenage Josie, though it becomes apparent that more may be expected of Klara. With resonances of two of his previous novels Never Let Me Go and of The Remains of the Day, it is a much-anticipated addition to Ishiguro’s body of work. Sameer Rahim, books editor at Prospect magazine, joins us to review.
The kind of systemic violence that led to the death of George Floyd is the concern of the composer and producer Adrian Younge in The American Negro, his multimedia project for Black History Month in the US. It comprises an album of music and spoken word, a four part podcast series, Invisible Blackness, and a short film. Live from Los Angeles Adrian Younge talks to us about this ambitious and unapologetic critique of the malevolent psychology that afflicts people of colour in America today.
Poet Alison Brackenbury considers poetic responses to the arrival of Spring, from the familiar to the over-familiiar.
And our occasional series dedicated to Moments of Joy continues with games writer Jordan Erica Webber, who finds peace and happiness at the end of the universe in the game Outer Wilds.
Presenter : Tom Sutcliffe
Producer : Simon Richardson
Main image: Sir Kazuo Ishiguro
Image credit: Howard Sooley
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Kazuo Ishiguro's Klara and the Sun
Adrian Younge
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- Mon 1 Mar 2021 19:15Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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