Nobel-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro on artificial intelligence and love
The Remains of the Day and Never Let Me Go are the novels that made Kazuo Ishiguro a household name, still taught on the English syllabus. Having won everything from the Booker to a knighthood, he is the only living British winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. His new novel, Klara and the Sun, is on the surface a sci-fi about artificial intelligence, but of course it is about much more, mostly love. We spoke to Kazuo Ishiguro for this week's Ways to Change the World podcast and began by asking what he wants people to know about the new storyline.

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro: A Nobel Novelist Searches for Hope | The Agenda

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro interview (1995)

▶︎
The impact of artificial intelligence on human love - Kazuo Ishiguro

▶︎
Nobel Lecture: Kazuo Ishiguro, Nobel Prize in Literature 2017

▶︎
KAZUO ISHIGURO on The Remains of the Day | Books on Film | TIFF 2017

▶︎
1987: KAZUO ISHIGURO Interview | Bookmark | Writers and Wordsmiths | BBC Archive

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro on Klara and the Sun

▶︎
Bill Nighy, Kazuo Ishiguro & Oliver Hermanus on Living | Film4 Interview

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro interview (2000)

▶︎
Sir Kazuo Ishiguro, Academy Class of 2017, Full Interview

▶︎
Writing about Cultural Change (Kazuo Ishiguro)

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro on Brexit: 'The nation is very bitterly divided' - BBC Newsnight

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro: The Waterstones Interview

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro discusses his intention behind writing the novel, Never Let Me Go

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro, Nobel Prize in Literature 2017: Official interview

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro: On Writing and Literature

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro on why the characters in Never Let Me Go don't run

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro | On Being Human | Edinburgh International Book Festival

▶︎
Kazuo Ishiguro: The Buried Giant

▶︎
