The Memory Police

Yoko Ogawa 1994

Devastation Rating

Existential Dread
philosophical dystopian loss literary fiction

Our Take

On an island, things vanish — roses, birds, photographs — and the inhabitants forget them. Ogawa writes forgetting as a kind of death that cannot be grieved because the grievers forget the lost thing too. The Memory Police is the most quietly annihilating novel about erasure ever written. The novel's central terror: if no one remembers whether the loss has happened, has it happened at all?

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