Now retired, Ono struggles with family matters. It wasn’t an auction for money, but rather for prestige. It once belonged to a famous artist, and he won it at auction. Ono wonders if he really deserves his house. Even though Ono decides that his actions were wrong, his family doesn’t seem to think so-or they don’t care, as they enjoy the comforts his prestige provides. Ono had had doubts about Kuroda’s loyalty, which he shared with the authorities as a result, Kuroda had been arrested. He visits with other artists, even Kuroda, whom he feels he wronged. Identity is a major theme, and Ono spends much of the novel trying to figure out his own identity and his place in his family and in the post-war world. Due to his political position-working as a nationalist creator of propaganda for the government during World War II-Ono doubts his status after his daughter’s marriage negotiations suffer. Retired artist Masuji Ono’s career has delivered him prestige, but he questions his status. An Artist of the Floating World (1986), a novel by Nobel-winner Kazuo Ishiguro, was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize it also took home the Whitbread Book of the Year Award.
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