As is the case with other great English detectives of fiction, such as Sherlock Holmes or Lord Peter Whimsy, Christopher Banks solves his cases with the ease and aplomb befitting proper English gentlemen. But perhaps unlike other detective stories, which often feature an omniscient narrator, When We Were Orphans is told solely from Banks’ point of view. Ishiguro uses the first-person point of view of a very limited narrator who speaks very highly of his own accomplishments. We become aware through the course of the novel that despite Banks’ illustrious reputation, Banks is anything but a stalwart bastion of wisdom and circumspection. Instead, he is a man full of cloudy memories and rabbit-trail thoughts.



















