I ONLY READ KLARA AND THE SUN, but Goodreads doesn’t list these two books separately.
It was different. I liked that Ishiguro didn’t just spell things out but gave hints, sometimes confusing; I like when an author gives his readers credit for having some intelligence that way.
Klara’s visual problems were intriguing, a processing problem, I thought, maybe a bug that the manufacturers worked out in the next model. Klara never seemed to realize that she even had a problem. It was interesting to see her understanding increase as she had more and more experiences.
Klara was more relatable for me than the humans, but she was, after all, the narrator, so all her thoughts and motivations were made clear. Also, being an AF, her programming was designed to make her sympathetic to humans’ feelings, to make her want to be friendly and supportive.
There are other issues raised in the book — buying your child a robot for a friend instead of creating opportunities for your child to have human friends; genetic modification; robots replacing humans in the workforce and what that does to humans whose careers are taken away. All in all, a thought-provoking book that I recommend.
P.S. - Ha ha! I couldn’t post this review at first, because I had failed to go through the “I’m not a robot” process.