The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro — book cover

Book details

The Remains of the Day

by Kazuo Ishiguro

1989 · Faber & Faber

About the book

In 1956, Stevens, an aging butler at Darlington Hall, takes a six-day motoring trip through the English West Country. As he travels, he evaluates his decades of service to the late Lord Darlington, a man whose reputation was ruined by his pre-war sympathies for Nazi Germany. Stevens defines his life through a rigid framework of professional dignity and absolute loyalty, suppressing all private emotions to maintain the perfect facade of the Great British Butler. This internal investigation forces him to confront his failure to acknowledge his feelings for Miss Kenton, the former housekeeper, and the moral cost of serving a master whose political judgment was fundamentally flawed.

This novel is for readers interested in the psychological mechanisms of self-deception and the constraints of the British class system. It appeals to those who appreciate subtle, first-person narratives where the speaker reveals more than they consciously intend. Readers finish the book with a clear understanding of how professional duty can eclipse personal identity. It provides a stark look at the consequences of prioritizing decorum over human connection, leaving the reader to consider the weight of regret and the high price of emotional restraint in the autumn of one's life.

Details

Published
1989
Publisher
Faber & Faber
ISBN
9780582424623
Language
EN