The Remains of the Day
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Average customer review:Product Description
Key Features:
- Study methods
- Introduction to the text
- Summaries with critical notes
- Themes and techniques
- Textual analysis of key passages
- Author biography
- Historical and literary background
- Modern and historical critical approaches
- Chronology
- Glossary of literary terms
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2218 in Books
- Published on: 2005-03-03
- Binding: Paperback
- 272 pages
Customer Reviews
Beautiful, touching, heart-breaking. Simply wonderful.
I have read this book four or five times now. I recently purchased the book again. The brilliance of The Remains of the Day is illustrated by the fact that you can read it several times and the poignancy and emotional evocation hit with the same force as reading for the first time. The book opens with a prologue that centres on the theme of bantering - which is quite simply brilliant in the way it probes and makes real issues of culture and meaning, and the difficulties inherent in stepping into different worlds. The rest of the book is simply beautiful, moving and real to an extent that is very rarely reached. I am hardly ever touched on a deep emotional level by novels but this book tears me apart every time. Reading it makes me want to reach out and talk to Mr Stevens and Miss Kenton and plead with them not to walk away from their love for each other. Without doubt one of the best novels ever written.
Touching and beautiful
It was an impulse read after seeing the movie. What a dear book! It's been a long time since I really enjoyed reading and I read a lot but what I mean is deriving almost physical pleasure from beautiful and eloquent language, and taking time over a book unfolding the characters. One cannot fail to be moved by the story and it certainly made me want to re-assess the certain priorities. My favourite scene is towards the end when Miss Kenton confesses that the reason she was unhappy with her marriage is because she often wondered what kind of a life she might have had with him, Stevens, it's absolutely breathtaking. Why or why do we waste opportunities.....
A compelling read
I read this book as part of my university course and really enjoyed it. the main character, Stevens, is flawed and he does not even realise it. most of the time he seems completely detached from his emotions but that is part of his appeal. by the end of the novel you really are rooting for him, hoping that his journey, both physically and retrospectively, have made a difference to him and his life. some people in my class did not like this but i found it really enjoyable, one of those books that just flew by, definitely worth a look.




