Wednesday, 7 April 2021

Never Let Me Go

After enjoying Kazuo Ishiguro's novel Klara and the Sun, I thought I'd try another of his works. I chose Never Let Me Go.

Like Klara, it is a first person narrative, the narrator being Kathy. Kathy is a young woman who tells the story of her life at Hailsham, a boarding school, and in particular her friendship there, and subsequently, with Tommy and Ruth.

From the beginning there are hints of something different. Kathy is a carer and her 'patients' are referred to as 'donors'. What they donate and why they need care unfolds gradually. At the time of telling the tale, Kathy is 31 years old and it is her reminiscences of Ruth and Tommy that take her - and us - back to the  beginning at Hailsham.

The beginning, because there is no reference to what came before.

The students at Hailsham were taught by Guardians. Once a month or so, a mysterious female whom the students and guardians called Madame appeared at the school and took away works of art which had been created by the students. They are led to believe that there is a 'Gallery' to which these paintings and drawings are taken, with no knowledge why, or of what happens to them. 

"I keep thinking about all these things. Like why Madame comes and takes away our best pictures. What's that for exactly?"
"It's for the Gallery."
"But what is her gallery? She keeps coming here and taking away our best work. She must have stacks of it by now."

Thus the author creates an air of mystery, perhaps even darkness, which he subjects to a process of slow reveal throughout the book.

At this point in my story, if I have tempted you to read the book, you should stop reading this, because spoilers follow.

About a quarter of the way through the book, Kathy finds a cassette tape of a song Never Let Me Go by Judy Bridgewater. Later she reflects:

"There's a bit which keeps coming round when Judy sings 'Never let me go ... Oh baby, baby ... Never let me go'. By then, of course we all knew something I hadn't known back then, which was that none of us could have babies."

And there it is, a casual remark that is the first shock for the reader. It's a technique I noticed in Klara and the Sun; you are reading at your normal speed - which is perhaps a bit too fast - and you are jolted into "Wait! Did I just read they can't have babies? There's been no mention of that before."

Shortly after this episode, Miss Lucy, the most open of the Guardians, responds in class to a discussion about the future for the students.

"If no one else will talk to you, then I will. The problem, as I see it, is that you've been told and not told. None of you will go to America, none of you will be film stars. And none of you will be working in supermarkets as I heard some of you planning the other day. Your lives are set out for you. You'll become adults, then before you're old, before you're even middle-aged, you'll start to donate your vital organs. That's what each of you was created to do."

Looking back on this some years later, Kathy says that Ruth said Miss Lucy "told us a lot more; how before donations we'd all spend some time as carers, about the usual sequence of the donations, the recovery centres and so on - but I'm pretty sure she didn't."

Just before halfway in the book, when Kathy, Ruth and Tommy are at a new place, the Cottages - which feels like a hippy commune: a bit of gardening, some general mooning about - Ruth tells Kathy about two of the 'inmates' taking a trip to Cromer and claiming "they saw this ... person. Working in an open-plan office. They reckon this person's a possible. For me."

Kathy muses "since each of us was copied at some point from a normal person, there must be, for each of us, a model getting on with his or her life."

And that's it; Kathy, Ruth, Tommy and the others are clones. We don't hear anything of their pre-Hailsham life because they didn't have one. They are part of an organ farming factory process. It's the genius of Ishiguro that, despite it being a dark, dark context, he invests it with a sense of normality. The actors - not in the drama, because there is no drama, just events - slowly awaken to the realities of their 'lives', but not with any emotion, just acceptance.

Years later, Kathy and Tommy seek out Madame, who tells them "we challenged the entire way the donations programme was being run ... we demonstrated to the world that if clones - or students, as we preferred to call you - were reared in humane, cultivated environments, it was possible for them to grow to be as sensitive and intelligent as any ordinary human being ... that was why we collected your art. We selected the best of it and put on special exhibitions ... 'There, look!' we could say. How dare you claim these children are anything less than fully human?'"

By this time, Kathy has become carer to Ruth, who gives her four donations and 'completes'.

Now Tommy is her donor and, after three donations, he muses "You know why it is, Kath, why everyone worries so much about the fourth? It's because they're not sure they'll really complete."

"I'd been wondering for a while if this would come up ... You'll have heard the same talk. How maybe, after the fourth donation, even if you've technically completed, you're still conscious in some sort of way; how then you find there are more donations, plenty of them, on the other side of that line; how there are no more recovery centres, no carers, no friends; how's there's nothing to do except watch your remaining donations until they switch you off."

At the end Kathy, after many years as a wonderful carer, opts to begin the transition to become a donor. The cycle nears completion. There are no tears; no regrets. Perhaps a sense of inevitability rather than duty. It's written in such a calming way that the reader doesn't feel extremes of emotion, rather reflecting on the beauty of three young lives lived well. The author warns us of where we as the human race might go, but with a poignancy that helped this reader at least to see through the darkness into the light.

Sunday, 4 April 2021

Give us an 'N'

That's what you'd be shouting if I was playing football and you and the other fans were encouraging me with chants:

Give us an 'N'
Give us an 'I'
Give us a 'G'
Give us an 'E'
Give us an 'L'

And so on until you had spelt out my surname too.

Imagine yourself a fan of Sutton United, whose striker is...

Isaac Tanitoluwaloba Aduraoluwatimileyin Olaofe. Don't worry, there are 90 minutes in a football match so you've got time.

Isaac is actually a Millwall player, on loan at suburban Sutton. He scored a hat trick in November.

Sutton are currently top of the National League, with a decent chance of getting promoted to the Football League come the end of the season. At the other end of the National League table there is...

Dover Athletic - played 0, won 0, drawn 0, lost 0; goals for 0, goals against 0. How come?

Sadly, the lockdown measures - no fans in stadiums - have ruined the finances of many small clubs and Dover decided that the cost of playing home matches, set against the total lack of match day income, was simply not sustainable. So they decided to not play any matches, effectively defaulting.

It's very sad so...

Give us a 'D'
Give us an 'O'
Give us a 'V'
Give us an 'E'
Give us an 'R'

Let's hear it!

Thursday, 1 April 2021

Puzzle Palace

More clunky video. I hope you can enjoy the content despite my obvious lack of movie making skills!


Monday, 29 March 2021

Blue sky

Not a cloud in the sky.

Charlestown harbour
I feel as though I have been let out of jail. All those dreary winter afternoons, getting dark at 4:30, have been put behind us. Coinciding with gradual release from (also dreary) lockdown, the temperature in Charlestown, Cornwall, UK rose to a massive 13°!

I went out in a boat 

The Owl and the Pussy-cat went to sea
In a beautiful pea-green boat

but a storm brewed up and we had a bit of a problem:

Just kidding
Don't worry - just kidding. I suppose I should be able to tell you what ship this is - was - but all I know is that it is publicising the Shipwreck Museum.

Anyway the sky is blue and I invite you to sing along with the Electric Light Orchestra. Let's hear you!

Sun is shinin' in the sky
There ain't a cloud in sight
It's stopped rainin' everybody's in the play
And don't you know
It's a beautiful new day, hey hey

[♭♮♯♭♮♯]

Mr. Blue Sky please tell us why
You had to hide away for so long (so long)
Where did we go wrong?

Friday, 26 March 2021

It's finished...

I'm channelling my inner Hugh Jackman.

What's next? The Death Star.....
1,000 pieces. Round. That's the exterior and obviously impossible. But wait! It's double sided....
That's the schematic. Perhaps marginally less traumatic for me.
Why do my family and friends feel the need to torment me?



Wednesday, 24 March 2021

Is Klara sentient?

I've been reading Kazuo Ishiguro's latest novel Klara and the Sun. It stimulated thoughts about sentience, which is a subject that interests me.

Klara is an AF. An Artificial Friend. A machine with the appearance of a human; in Klara's case, a human female ["you look kind of French", Josie said]. An android. The narrator of the story.

But really, Klara is an observer. Of human behaviour and, in her reactions to that behaviour, we move closer to an answer to the question: Is Klara sentient?

The story begins with Klara on display in an AF store, being examined by prospective purchasers. She spends her time, with her fellow AF Rosa, observing people and happenings in the street that she can see through the store's window:

"Rosa missed so many signals. She would often exclaim delightedly at a pair going by, and I would look and realize that even though a girl was smiling at her AF, she was in fact angry with him."

"I became puzzled, then increasingly fascinated by the more mysterious emotions passers-by would display in front of us."

Klara is sold to a family to be an AF to 12½ year old Josie. What follows - which I'm not going to detail, so as to avoid spoilers - encompasses a few years of their lives together. There are dark moments, happy moments, sad moments. In some ways, the story feels like a fairy tale; the Sun, for instance, is anthropomorphised - and has a role to play:

[my mind had become filled with...the question of why the Sun hadn't yet sent his special help...perhaps he'd been correct at that point to wait]

This story is like peeling an onion; bit by bit, truths are exposed. There are hints of this in the early language; numerous references to 'AFs' precede the revelation of 'Artificial Friend'. The author is challenging our imagination. But my purpose here is less about the narrative as such and more about answering the question in the title.

There are various definitions and interpretations of sentience. The most commonly held view is that a sentient being has feelings. Feelings of pain and other sensations but also of emotions, consciousness, maybe even self-awareness. Much has been written about the extent to which animals exhibit sentience. The European Union's Treaty of Lisbon of 2009 declares "Member States shall, since animals are sentient beings, pay full regard to the welfare requirements of animals".

Klara seems to be intuitive about the feelings of passers by that she observes from the store window:

"When AFs did go by us they almost always acted oddly, speeding up their walk and keeping their faces turned away. I wondered then if perhaps we - the whole store - were an embarrassment to them...........another possibility came to me, that the AFs weren't embarrassed, but were afraid."

"'Those people seem so pleased to see each other', Manager said. And I realized she'd been watching them as closely as I had. 'Yes, they seem so happy', I said. 'But it's strange because they also seem upset.'"

Is intuition an indicator of sentience?

Josie, when talking to Klara before the purchase, is sensitive to Klara's feelings: "I don't want you coming against your will." Klara recounts an episode where she observes a Beggar Man and his dog, whom she believes have died. "I felt sadness then." 

Throughout the story, Klara exhibits feelings. She is "waiting anxiously". "Wishing to give [Josie] privacy." "An anxiety passed through my mind." "now that I was aware, I was able to see another tiny signal."

Feelings ands awareness - surely sentience indicators.

But can intuition and sadness be learned? At one point Klara says "I believe I have many feelings. The more I observe, the more feelings become available to me." Which suggests the possibility that artificial intelligence can be programmed to learn - and to learn how to feel. Even so, once Klara has feelings, I would advocate that she has become sentient, and the AF becomes a sentient being.

Why am I so interested in sentience? My answer to that is: how can you not be? Artificial intelligence will be one of the most important challenges for humankind in the future and we will need to understand, or at least address, the challenge. I think sentience is one of the reasons I enjoy reading and watching science fiction. It's too easy to dismiss SF as mere entertainment but the very best examples explore humanity's future issues. It's one of the abiding themes of Star Trek: The Next Generation; indeed, there is a whole episode written around it - The Measure Of A Man. 

I won't live to see the emergence of beings about whom philosophers will debate their sentience - Commander Data, an android, lives in the 24th century - but my grandchildren probably will. I hope they will treat the issues with the seriousness they deserve. Maybe they'll read this blog and perhaps watch some Star Trek.

The world that Klara inhabits is a futuristic one and, in addition to the central question about Klara and sentience, it has very dark parts which are not explored, more hinted at. Although essentially a fairy tale, it raises deep questions and doesn't always provide answers. I loved the way in which the author takes the reader, as though a Friend, on a journey of exploration; he shows me glimpses of life but encourages me to explore the meanings.

This is the first Ishiguro novel which I have read and I certainly will read more. I have in the past read a number of prize-winning novels - Midnight's Children and Rites Of Passage come to mind - and often found them a hard read. Worthwhile but a bit of a struggle. Klara and the Sun is never that. Eminently readable, enjoyable and even, in a way, moving.