Nagasaki Is Reborn in an Adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s First Novel
A Pale View of Hills confronts the Japanese city’s traumatic legacy after the atomic bomb and explores the suppression of wartime memory.
A still from A Pale View of Hills featuring Suzu Hirose (left) and Fumi Nikaido.
Source: Vue Lumière
The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki inevitably conjure images of mass death and devastation. What they don’t immediately call to mind are the restrained, interior novels of Kazuo Ishiguro, author of The Remains of the Day and Never Let Me Go. Yet it was Japan’s destruction and rebirth that shaped his literary beginnings.
When Ishiguro accepted the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017, he recalled writing his first novel in his twenties. A Pale View of Hills, published in 1982, tells the story of a Japanese woman from Nagasaki living in postwar England, remembering and misremembering her past. Although raised and steeped in 1970s British culture, Ishiguro found himself drawn to the Japanese city where he spent his first five years.