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18 December, 16:46

Never Let me go

The novel takes place in "the late 1990s," and a postwar science boom has resulted in human cloning and the surgical harvesting of organs to cure cancer and other diseases. In an interview with January Magazine, Ishiguro said that he is not interested in realism. In spite of the novel's fictitious premise, however, how "realistically" does Never Let Me Go reflect the world we live in, where scientific advancement can be seemingly irresistible?

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  1. 18 December, 17:06
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    We as a human race have the power to do and create great things. We have for millions of years and this is just the next step in technological evolution. I expect cloning to be a public known reality within the next 50 years, but human cloning is already a reality but the common people within society have been told otherwise. unknown knowns
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