An amnesia-inducing mist, a dragon quest, an Arthurian knight who patrols the highlands — Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant might not sound like a post-9/11 novel but, at least in the most literal sense, that is how it began. The British writer first found himself talking about the project shortly after the attacks on New York and Washington, at a readers’ event in Japan. “All I had at that point
Japan goes missing: invisible host at the summitBy Philip StephensPublished: July 3 2008 19:18 | Last updated: July 3 2008 19:18 I have a question. Where is Japan? The world leaders and accompanying media hordes heading this weekend for the shores of Lake Toya need not turn to their atlases. The question is one of psychology rather than geography. Japan is still the world’s second most powerful ec
A new version of Google Desktop triggered a debate among bloggers after a US digital rights campaign group said it posed a risk to security. The not-for-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation said a feature in the software allows Google to keep personal data on its servers for up to 30 days. The feature that has raised concern - called Search Across Computers - lets users search their content on mu
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