The Kindness of Women is a 1991 novel by British author J.G. Ballard. A sequel to his 1984 novel Empire of the Sun, which drew on the author's boyhood in Shanghai during World War II, The Kindness of Women presents a lightly fictionalized treatment of Ballard's life from Shanghai through to adulthood in England. It culminates in the late 1980s with the making of Steven Spielberg's movie based on Empire of the Sun. A non-fiction account of the same experiences can be found in Ballard's autiobiography, Miracles of Life. It was first published in the UK by HarperCollins and in the U.S. by... Farrar, Straus and Giroux. The Kindness of Women is semi-autobiographical, and discusses Jim's departure from China, where he had been born and had been interned, to visit England, other parts of Europe and the USA. Jim is obsessed with two themes throughout the book: sex, and death. Sexual encounters are described in the most clinical, cold terms. The act of sex becomes a dispassionate observation of the male and female genitalia. Too often Jim is unaroused, and has to be "worked on" by his female partner.
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| Author: | J. G. Ballard |
| Genre: | Autobiographical novel, Fiction |
| Year published: | 1991 |
| Number of editions: | 5 |