I began reading Yoko Ogawa’s The Memory Police on board a silent midnight flight and finished it a few weeks later during a power outage caused by the recent storms — two remarkably fitting settings for reading the book: a hushed peace imposed against dark skies.
The Memory Police is a haunting, dystopian tale set on a remote island where the inhabitants are subjected to the gradual disappearance of everyday objects from their lives. With each and every disappearance, people lose not only the physical presence of the items, but also any of the memories and emotions associated with them. The few who are able to retain their memories are hunted by the Memory Police, a shadowy authoritarian force with no central power except the purpose of exterminating all those resistant to forgetting.
The story follows a nameless protagonist who, as a novelist, begins to experience a profound crisis of reality. As the world around her starts to vanish piece by piece, she is left to grapple with an increasingly disorienting existence. Amid this unraveling reality, she finds herself hiding her editor, R, who possesses the rare ability to remember what has disappeared from their island. As the protagonist and R navigate the growing void, they are joined by an old family friend, who offers additional insight and support. Over the course of a harsh winter, the protagonist embarks on a journey to uncover the truth behind the mysterious disappearances and to make sense of the profound loss that surrounds her.
Steeped in surrealism, the novel meditates on a wide range of themes that connect in the most unforeseen of ways, from loss to identity to the fragility of what it means to remember and forget. The protagonist goes about her everyday while striving to comprehend and preserve what remains in a world slipping into a concerningly unnoticeable oblivion. Lyrical prose drew me into Ogawa’s chilly world, where forgetting is fashioned into a survival mechanism, but it is in this erasure itself where unsettling questions are raised.
The novel, however, has its weak points. Interspersed throughout the narrative are excerpts from the protagonist’s most recent work which she and R are editing. It follows the short, unsettling tale of a young typist who has lost her voice and her suspicious mentor turned boyfriend. At times, these small sections offer insightful parallels to the main plot that add layers of meaning while being a refresher from the dreary world of the protagonist and R. Despite this, the excerpts are introduced at unsatisfactory moments where readers would likely be engaged in the primary narrative. This untimely placement results in a disorienting break in flow that does not necessarily serve much to either narrative in the book and feel like an unnecessary “scenic route” from the momentum that the main story needs.
The Memory Police is a novel that deeply intrigued me with its exploration of memory and identity, but it also left me with mixed feelings. On one hand, Ogawa’s portrayal of a world where memories and objects disappear is profoundly unsettling and thought-provoking. The nameless protagonist, in particular, resonated with me as a powerful symbol of how our identities can be fragile and easily lost when detached from our memories. However, I found myself struggling with the book’s pacing. The frequent interruptions from the main story continuously detached me from my experience, at times leading to some frustration over not being able to continue exploring the actual message at length.
Despite these challenges, I greatly appreciated the novel’s ambitious themes and its ability to provoke deep reflection on how we remember. I would recommend The Memory Police to anyone who enjoy introspective, literary dystopias and don’t mind a narrative that requires patience and contemplation.
Wow now I really want yo read this book!!
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