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Cloud Atlas: A Novel Paperback – August 17, 2004
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One of the New York Times’s 100 Best Books of the 21st Century • Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize
Cloud Atlas begins in 1850 with Adam Ewing, an American notary voyaging from the Chatham Isles to his home in California. Ewing is befriended by a physician, Dr. Goose, who begins to treat him for a rare species of brain parasite. The novel careens, with dazzling virtuosity, to Belgium in 1931, to the West Coast in the 1970s, to an inglorious present-day England, to a Korean superstate of the near future where neocapitalism has run amok, and, finally, to a postapocalyptic Iron Age Hawaii in the last days of history.
But the story doesn’t end even there. The novel boomerangs back through centuries and space, returning by the same route, in reverse, to its starting point. Along the way, David Mitchell reveals how his disparate characters connect, how their fates intertwine, and how their souls drift across time like clouds across the sky.
As wild as a video game, as mysterious as a Zen koan, Cloud Atlas is an unforgettable tour de force that, like its incomparable author, has transcended its cult classic status to become a worldwide phenomenon.
- Print length528 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House Trade Paperbacks
- Publication dateAugust 17, 2004
- Dimensions5.5 x 1.1 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-109780375507250
- ISBN-13978-0375507250
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The New Yorker
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker
From Bookmarks Magazine
This skillthe technical expertise that allows Mitchell to adopt a different genre for each of his six storylinesgets him into a little trouble. The New York Times Book Review complains that Mitchells writing too often seems android, that his chameleon-like shifts render his work coldly impressive rather than fallibly human. However, most reviewers found Mitchells unorthodox structure captivating. After an initial period of confusion, Cloud Atlas becomes a challenging puzzle most were eager to solve. When the storylines finally coalesce, the result is a novel that stands above its peers in both emotional impact and philosophical import. As the Los Angeles Times notes, Cloud Atlas offers too many powerful insights to be dismissed as a mere exercise in style. By all accounts, Mitchell has produced in Cloud Atlas a wholly original work. For most, it is also wholly satisfying.
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
Review
FINALIST FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE
LONGLISTED FOR THE INTERNATIONAL IMPAC DUBLIN LITERARY AWARD
A Times (UK) Best Book of the Decade
A New York Times Notable Book
A Globe and Mail 100 Best Book
Longlisted for the IMPAC Award
“[David] Mitchell is, clearly, a genius. He writes as though at the helm of some perpetual dream machine, can evidently do anything, and his ambition is written in magma across this novel’s every page.”—The New York Times Book Review
“One of those how-the-holy-hell-did-he-do-it? modern classics that no doubt is—and should be—read by any student of contemporary literature.”—Dave Eggers
“Wildly entertaining . . . a head rush, both action-packed and chillingly ruminative.”—People
“The novel as series of nested dolls or Chinese boxes, a puzzle-book, and yet—not just dazzling, amusing, or clever but heartbreaking and passionate, too. I’ve never read anything quite like it, and I’m grateful to have lived, for a while, in all its many worlds.”—Michael Chabon
“Cloud Atlas ought to make [Mitchell] famous on both sides of the Atlantic as a writer whose fearlessness is matched by his talent.”—The Washington Post Book World
“Thrilling . . . One of the biggest joys in Cloud Atlas is watching Mitchell sashay from genre to genre without a hitch in his dance step.”—Boston Sunday Globe
“Grand and elaborate . . . [Mitchell] creates a world and language at once foreign and strange, yet strikingly familiar and intimate.”—Los Angeles Times
About the Author
From The Washington Post
Novels whose plots hinge on intricate puzzles -- e.g., The Da Vinci Code and The Rule of Four -- are all the rage these days, but the puzzle of Cloud Atlas isn't in the book, it is the book. What appears at first glance to be a novel is in fact six novellas whose interrelatedness is only hinted at during the book's first half, then revealed fully and splendidly after the book's middle, which is really the book's end. Confused? You're supposed to be, at least for a little while: It's from this starting point of dislocation that Mitchell begins a virtuosic round trip through the strata of history and causality, exploring the permanence of man's inhumanity to man and the impermanence of what we have come to call civilization.
Mitchell begins his chronology of our fall from grace with a character named Adam, naturally. "The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing" presents us with the diary of a seafaring 1850s American notary, killing time on the Chatham Islands off New Zealand as he waits for his homeward ship to set sail. Engaging in the amateur anthropology of the visitor, the morally upright Ewing struggles to square his belief in the civilizing, beneficent aspects of colonialism with what he sees before him, "that casual brutality lighter races show the darker." He also befriends an English doctor who diagnoses Ewing with a rare, brain-destroying disease, and who begins treating the American immediately with a cocktail of powerful drugs.
Then, in mid-sentence, Mitchell whisks us away from the scene, and suddenly we are reading the letters of one Robert Frobisher, a charmingly louche, happily bisexual British composer of the 1930s whose tendency to skip out on hotel bills has finally caught up with him. As he recounts his ambitious plan to evade creditors and gain hitherto elusive fame by exploiting an elderly maestro, we merrily follow his rake's progress and almost forget the plight of poor Adam Ewing -- until, that is, Frobisher mentions in passing that he has serendipitously found and read one-half of a bound copy of Ewing's journal. (The second half is damnably missing.) Shortly thereafter, we take our leave of Frobisher just as abruptly as we were introduced to him, and Mitchell drops us down in 1970s California, at the opening chapter of a crime-fiction potboiler whose heroine, a plucky magazine journalist named Luisa Rey, is on the verge of uncovering a nefarious conspiracy.
And so it goes, again and again: a cycle of starts and stops that vectors through past, present and future, linked by buried clues and the twin refrains of deceit and exploitation. What all these stories have in common is that each draws its lifeblood from the same heart of darkness. Cloud Atlas is a work of fiction, ultimately, about the myriad misuses of fiction: the seductive lies told by grifters, CEOs, politicians and others in the service of expanding empires and maintaining power. Soon we meet Timothy Cavendish, the curmudgeonly editor of a London vanity press, who is tricked into incarceration by his vengeful brother. We meet a wise, world-weary clone from 22nd-century Korea, where hypercapitalism and biotechnology have fused into absolute tyranny. And finally, in post-apocalypse Hawaii, we meet a storyteller who enthralls his listeners with the tale of a suspicious visitor from a far-off land, echoing the account of Adam Ewing that opens the book.
At this point the novel's action rapidly reverses course, going back through time and picking up the abandoned narrative threads, weaving them together to craft a fascinating meditation on civilization's insatiable appetites. Even Mitchell's characters seem to voice uncertainty about their creator's grand plan. "Revolutionary or gimmicky? Shan't know until it's finished," admits Frobisher of his own "Cloud Sextet," a musical composition whose ambitious six-part structure mirrors the novel's. And Cavendish, the editor from the old school, has his qualms, too: "I disapprove of flashbacks, foreshadowings, and tricksy devices; they belong in the 1980s with M.A.s in postmodernism and chaos theory," he harrumphs.
But sometimes novels filled with big ideas require equally big mechanisms for relaying them, and it's hard to imagine an idea bigger than the one Mitchell is tackling here: how the will to power that compels the strong to subjugate the weak is replayed perpetually in a cycle of eternal recurrence. Rarely has the all-encompassing prefix of "metafiction" seemed so apposite. Here is not only the academic pessimism of Marx, Hobbes and Nietzsche but also the frightening portents of Aldous Huxley and the linguistic daring of Anthony Burgess. Here, too, are Melville's maritime tableaux, the mordant satire of Kingsley Amis and, in the voice of Robert Frobisher -- Mitchell's most poignant and fully realized character -- the unmistakable ghost of Paul Bowles. Here is a veritable film festival of unembarrassed cinematic references and inspirations, from "Soylent Green" to "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" to "The Graduate" to the postwar comedies of England's Ealing Studios. Here is an obviously sincere affection for the oft-maligned genres of mystery, science fiction and fantasy.
All of these influences, and countless others, gel into a work that nevertheless manages to be completely original. More significantly, the various pieces of David Mitchell's mysterious puzzle combine to form a haunting image that stays with the reader long after the book has been closed. Cloud Atlas ought to make him famous on both sides of the Atlantic as a writer whose fearlessness is matched by his talent.
Reviewed by Jeff Turrentine
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Beyond the Indian hamlet, upon a forlorn strand, I happened on a trail of recent footprints. Through rotting kelp, sea cocoa-nuts & bamboo, the tracks led me to their maker, a White man, his trowzers & Pea-jacket rolled up, sporting a kempt beard & an outsized Beaver, shoveling & sifting the cindery sand with a teaspoon so intently that he noticed me only after I had hailed him from ten yards away. Thus it was, I made the acquaintance of Dr. Henry Goose, surgeon to the London nobility. His nationality was no surprise. If there be any eyrie so desolate, or isle so remote, that one may there resort unchallenged by an Englishman, ’tis not down on any map I ever saw.
Had the doctor misplaced anything on that dismal shore? Could I render assistance? Dr. Goose shook his head, knotted loose his ’kerchief & displayed its contents with clear pride. “Teeth, sir, are the enameled grails of the quest in hand. In days gone by this Arcadian strand was a cannibals’ banqueting hall, yes, where the strong engorged themselves on the weak. The teeth, they spat out, as you or I would expel cherry stones. But these base molars, sir, shall be transmuted to gold & how? An artisan of Piccadilly who fashions denture sets for the nobility pays handsomely for human gnashers. Do you know the price a quarter pound will earn, sir?”
I confessed I did not.
“Nor shall I enlighten you, sir, for ’tis a professional secret!” He tapped his nose. “Mr. Ewing, are you acquainted with Marchioness Grace of Mayfair? No? The better for you, for she is a corpse in petticoats. Five years have passed since this harridan besmirched my name, yes, with imputations that resulted in my being blackballed from Society.” Dr. Goose looked out to sea. “My peregrinations began in that dark hour.”
I expressed sympathy with the doctor’s plight.
“I thank you, sir, I thank you, but these ivories”—he shook his ’kerchief—“are my angels of redemption. Permit me to elucidate. The Marchioness wears dental fixtures fashioned by the afore- mentioned doctor. Next yuletide, just as that scented She-Donkey is addressing her Ambassadors’ Ball, I, Henry Goose, yes, I shall arise & declare to one & all that our hostess masticates with cannibals’ gnashers! Sir Hubert will challenge me, predictably, ‘Furnish your evidence,’ that boor shall roar, ‘or grant me satisfaction!’ I shall declare, ‘Evidence, Sir Hubert? Why, I gathered your mother’s teeth myself from the spittoon of the South Pacific! Here, sir, here are some of their fellows!’ & fling these very teeth into her tortoiseshell soup tureen & that, sir, that will grant me my satisfaction! The twittering wits will scald the icy Marchioness in their news sheets & by next season she shall be fortunate to receive an invitation to a Poorhouse Ball!”
In haste, I bade Henry Goose a good day. I fancy he is a Bedlamite.
Friday, 8th November—
In the rude shipyard beneath my window, work progresses on the jibboom, under Mr. Sykes’s directorship. Mr. Walker, Ocean Bay’s sole taverner, is also its principal timber merchant & he brags of his years as a master shipbuilder in Liverpool. (I am now versed enough in Antipodese etiquette to let such unlikely truths lie.) Mr. Sykes told me an entire week is needed to render the Prophet- ess “Bristol fashion.” Seven days holed up in the Musket seems a grim sentence, yet I recall the fangs of the banshee tempest & the mariners lost o’erboard & my present misfortune feels less acute.
I met Dr. Goose on the stairs this morning & we took breakfast together. He has lodged at the Musket since middle October after voyaging hither on a Brazilian merchantman, Namorados, from Feejee, where he practiced his arts in a mission. Now the doctor awaits a long-overdue Australian sealer, the Nellie, to convey him to Sydney. From the colony he will seek a position aboard a passenger ship for his native London.
My judgment of Dr. Goose was unjust & premature. One must be cynical as Diogenes to prosper in my profession, but cynicism can blind one to subtler virtues. The doctor has his eccentricities & recounts them gladly for a dram of Portuguese pisco (never to excess), but I vouchsafe he is the only other gentleman on this latitude east of Sydney & west of Valparaiso. I may even compose for him a letter of introduction for the Partridges in Sydney, for Dr. Goose & dear Fred are of the same cloth.
Poor weather precluding my morning outing, we yarned by the peat fire & the hours sped by like minutes. I spoke at length of Tilda & Jackson & also my fears of “gold fever” in San Francisco. Our conversation then voyaged from my hometown to my recent notarial duties in New South Wales, thence to Gibbon, Malthus & Godwin via Leeches & Locomotives. Attentive conversation is an emollient I lack sorely aboard the Prophetess & the doctor is a veritable polymath. Moreover, he possesses a handsome army of scrimshandered chessmen whom we shall keep busy until either the Prophetess’s departure or the Nellie’s arrival.
Saturday, 9th November—
Sunrise bright as a silver dollar. Our schooner still looks a woeful picture out in the Bay. An Indian war canoe is being careened on the shore. Henry & I struck out for “Banqueter’ s Beach” in holy-day mood, blithely saluting the maid who labors for Mr. Walker. The sullen miss was hanging laundry on a shrub & ignored us. She has a tinge of black blood & I fancy her mother is not far removed from the jungle breed.
As we passed below the Indian hamlet, a “humming” aroused our curiosity & we resolved to locate its source. The settlement is circumvallated by a stake fence, so decayed that one may gain ingress at a dozen places. A hairless bitch raised her head, but she was toothless & dying & did not bark. An outer ring of ponga huts (fashioned from branches, earthen walls & matted ceilings) groveled in the lees of “grandee” dwellings, wooden structures with carved lintel pieces & rudimentary porches. In the hub of this village, a public flogging was under way. Henry & I were the only two Whites present, but three castes of spectating Indians were demarked. The chieftain occupied his throne, in a feathered cloak, while the tattooed gentry & their womenfolk & children stood in attendance, numbering some thirty in total. The slaves, duskier & sootier than their nut-brown masters & less than half their number, squatted in the mud. Such inbred, bovine torpor! Pockmarked & pustular with haki-haki, these wretches watched the punishment, making no response but that bizarre, beelike “hum.” Empathy or condemnation, we knew not what the noise signified. The whip master was a Goliath whose physique would daunt any frontier prizefighter. Lizards mighty & small were tattooed over every inch of the savage’s musculature:—his pelt would fetch a fine price, though I should not be the man assigned to relieve him of it for all the pearls of O-hawaii! The piteous prisoner, hoarfrosted with many harsh years, was bound naked to an A-frame. His body shuddered with each excoriating lash, his back was a vellum of bloody runes, but his insensible face bespoke the serenity of a martyr already in the care of the Lord.
I confess, I swooned under each fall of the lash. Then a peculiar thing occurred. The beaten savage raised his slumped head, found my eye & shone me a look of uncanny, amicable knowing! As if a theatrical performer saw a long-lost friend in the Royal Box and, undetected by the audience, communicated his recognition. A tattooed “blackfella” approached us & flicked his nephrite dagger to indicate that we were unwelcome. I inquired after the nature of the prisoner’s crime. Henry put his arm around me. “Come, Adam, a wise man does not step betwixt the beast & his meat.”
Sunday, 10th November—
Mr. Boerhaave sat amidst his cabal of trusted ruffians like Lord Anaconda & his garter snakes. Their Sabbath “celebrations” downstairs had begun ere I had risen. I went in search of shaving water & found the tavern swilling with Tars awaiting their turn with those poor Indian girls whom Walker has ensnared in an impromptu bordello. (Rafael was not in the debauchers’ number.)
I do not break my Sabbath fast in a whorehouse. Henry’s sense of repulsion equaled to my own, so we forfeited breakfast (the maid was doubtless being pressed into alternative service) & set out for the chapel to worship with our fasts unbroken.
We had not gone two hundred yards when, to my consternation, I remembered this journal, lying on the table in my room at the Musket, visible to any drunken sailor who might break in. Fearful for its safety (& my own, were Mr. Boerhaave to get his hands on it), I retraced my steps to conceal it more artfully. Broad smirks greeted my return & I assumed I was “the devil being spoken of,” but I learned the true reason when I opened my door:—to wit, Mr. Boerhaave’s ursine buttocks astraddle his Blackamoor Goldilocks in my bed in flagrante delicto! Did that devil Dutchman apologize? Far from it! He judged himself the injured party & roared, “Get ye hence, Mr. Quillcock! or by God’s B——d, I shall snap your tricksy Yankee nib in two!”
I snatched my diary & clattered downstairs to a riotocracy of merriment & ridicule from the White savages there gathered. I remonstrated to Walker that I was paying for a private room & I expected it to remain private even during my absence, but that scoundrel merely offered a one-third discount on “a quarter-hour’s gallop on the comeliest filly in my stable!” Disgusted, I retorted that I was a husband & a father! & that I should rather die than abase my dignity & decency with any of his poxed whores! Walker swore to “decorate my eyes” if I called his own dear daughters “whores” again. One toothless garter snake jeered that if possessing a wife & a child was a single virtue, “Why, Mr. Ewing, I be ten times more virtuous than you be!” & an unseen hand emptied a tankard of sheog over my person. I withdrew ere the liquid was swapped for a more obdurate missile.
The chapel bell was summoning the God-fearing of Ocean Bay & I hurried thitherwards, where Henry waited, trying to forget the recent foulnesses witnessed at my lodgings. The chapel creaked like an old tub & its congregation numbered little more than the digits of two hands, but no traveler ever quenched his thirst at a desert oasis more thankfully than Henry & I gave worship this morning. The Lutheran founder has lain at rest in his chapel’s cemetery these ten winters past & no ordained successor has yet ventured to claim captaincy of the altar. Its denomination, therefore, is a “rattle bag” of Christian creeds. Biblical passages were read by that half of the congregation who know their let- ters & we joined in a hymn or two nominated by rota. The “steward” of this demotic flock, one Mr. D’Arnoq, stood beneath the modest cruciform & besought Henry & me to participate in likewise manner. Mindful of my own salvation from last week’s tempest, I nominated Luke ch. 8, “And they came to him, & awoke him, saying, Master, master, we perish. Then he arose, & rebuked the wind & the raging of the water: & they ceased, & there was a calm.”
Henry recited from Psalm the Eighth, in a voice as sonorous as any schooled dramatist: “Thou madest him to have dominion over the works of thy hands; thou has put all things under his feet: all sheep & oxen, yea & the beasts of the field; the fowl of the air & the fish of the sea & whatsoever passeth through the paths of the seas.”
No organist played a Magnificat but the wind in the flue chimney, no choir sang a Nunc Dimittis but the wuthering gulls, yet I fancy the Creator was not displeazed. We resembled more the Early Christians of Rome than any later Church encrusted with arcana & gemstones. Communal prayer followed. Parishioners prayed ad lib for the eradication of potato blight, mercy on a dead infant’s soul, blessing upon a new fishing boat, &c. Henry gave thanks for the hospitality shown us visitors by the Christians of Chatham Isle. I echoed these sentiments & sent a prayer for Tilda, Jackson & my father-in-law during my extended absence.
Product details
- ASIN : 0375507256
- Publisher : Random House Trade Paperbacks (August 17, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 528 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780375507250
- ISBN-13 : 978-0375507250
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.1 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #19,656 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #198 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
- #219 in Historical British & Irish Literature
- #2,000 in Literary Fiction (Books)
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Cloud Atlas: A Novel
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About the author

Born in 1969, David Mitchell grew up in Worcestershire. After graduating from Kent University, he taught English in Japan, where he wrote his first novel, GHOSTWRITTEN. Published in 1999, it was awarded the Mail on Sunday John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award. His second novel, NUMBER9DREAM, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and in 2003, David Mitchell was selected as one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists. His third novel, CLOUD ATLAS, was shortlisted for six awards including the Man Booker Prize, and adapted for film in 2012. It was followed by BLACK SWAN GREEN, shortlisted for the Costa Novel of the Year Award, and THE THOUSAND AUTUMNS OF JACOB DE ZOET, which was a No. 1 Sunday Times bestseller, and THE BONE CLOCKS which won the World Fantasy Best Novel Award. All three were longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. David Mitchell’s seventh novel is SLADE HOUSE (Sceptre, 2015).
In 2013, THE REASON I JUMP: ONE BOY'S VOICE FROM THE SILENCE OF AUTISM by Naoki Higashida was published by Sceptre in a translation from the Japanese by David Mitchell and KA Yoshida and became a Sunday Times and New York Times bestseller. Its successor, FALL DOWN SEVEN TIMES, GET UP EIGHT: A YOUNG MAN’S VOICE FROM THE SILENCE OF AUTISM, was published in 2017, and was also a Sunday Times bestseller.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book well-written and easy to read. They appreciate the complex storytelling that weaves together six stories. The characters have distinct voices and come to life for readers. The humor is described as wittiness and a boorish farce. Readers enjoy the subtle thematic connections between the sections. Overall, they consider the book worthwhile and worth the money.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book well-written and engaging. They read it carefully, often rereading entire passages to understand it better. The book is described as brilliant, well-crafted, and entertaining.
"...occasionally falls short of his ambitions, bravo to him for writing real literature in an age where the bestseller lists are topped by the likes of..." Read more
"...and wonder of author David Mitchell's variously moving, and variously entertaining, stories, as well as the over-arching, overall theme: that every..." Read more
"...I read it with such careful detail, often times rereading entire passages in order to pull in as much detail as I could...." Read more
"...I don’t believe I’m part of that audience, and while the book was generally enjoyable, perhaps not enough to make up for the effort required to read..." Read more
Customers enjoy the intricately woven stories. They find the book brilliant and fascinating, with a unique structure that unfolds slowly. The stories progress chronologically through the present day and into a post-apocalyptic future set in Hawaii. Readers appreciate the different narratives with their own distinct language styles.
"...To this day, the most haunting and memorable story for me was that of Sonmi-451...." Read more
"...The stories proceed chronologically through the present day and into a post-apocalyptic future set in Hawaii...." Read more
"...author David Mitchell's variously moving, and variously entertaining, stories, as well as the over-arching, overall theme: that every human being,..." Read more
"...Stories interrupting each other in completely different styles, colors, genres, yet completely intertwined - speaking to each other across the..." Read more
Customers enjoy the well-developed characters with distinct voices and ways of speaking. They find the characters come to life through the connections between their stories. The author's versatility is appreciated, as he writes in six different eras using real dialect.
"...'s strengths is the ability to so thoroughly and convincingly create a universe and characters that the reader feels as if he is strolling along the..." Read more
"...The connections between the character’s stories, even the most minute details, really created a world where these characters were metaphysically..." Read more
"...While this is clever, and well-executed, and each character has their own distinct voice and way of speaking, it also doesn’t make for the easiest..." Read more
"...Story 6 is full of fascinating language that sounds like real dialect, as in this: “..." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's humor. They find the writing witty and entertaining, with clever wordplay and references. The humor is described as dark, demanding, and dynamic. Readers appreciate the author's afterword and the way he constructs sentences. They also mention that the Luisa Rey section is hilarious if you are familiar with the 1970s.
"...where credit is due: it is the most ambitious, thought-provoking, entertaining, and imaginative work I've read in a good while...." Read more
"...I found the stories themselves to be quite well written and enjoyable...." Read more
"..."TheGhastly Ordeal of Timothy Cavendish", the fourth narrative - a boisterous, comedic farce, recounted in first person - takes place in England and..." Read more
"...While this is clever, and well-executed, and each character has their own distinct voice and way of speaking, it also doesn’t make for the easiest..." Read more
Customers find the book's themes fascinating and engaging. They say it explores human connection and disconnection through subtle connections between stories. Readers appreciate the author's ability to create rich worlds and complex characters, and the ideologies that bind them together. The book is described as profound and deeply affecting.
"...his willingness to place expectations on the reader, his ability to create a rich world and complex characters to inhabit them, and his lack of..." Read more
"...each other in completely different styles, colors, genres, yet completely intertwined - speaking to each other across the distances between periods..." Read more
"...This book is enthralling, hilarious, tragic, depressing, horrific, hopeful, and heartrendingly poignant. Beautiful & ugly. Like living...." Read more
"...unique structure of the novel and Mitchell's complex and interwoven thematic threads...." Read more
Customers find the book worthwhile. They appreciate the wise and startling observations, and important themes. The message is hopeful. Readers describe it as a brilliant detective story with intrigue, danger, love, sacrifice, betrayal, and more.
"...The message is indeed profound, and important...." Read more
"...to get through the first section, push forward - it’s so incredibly worth it. This novel, where do I even begin...." Read more
"...but it is by all means worth the effort...." Read more
"...form the driving force of the entire novel: is technology, is knowledge worth the cost? What values do we put on `civilisation?'..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book. Some find the concepts interesting and imaginative, describing it as clever and enjoyable. Others feel it's disorienting at times and lacks a unifying theme, making the storytelling chaotic.
"...Diving into these rich, diverse worlds, trying to understand how they all fit together, gradually piecing together the puzzle of Mitchell's meaning..." Read more
"...and variously entertaining, stories, as well as the over-arching, overall theme: that every human being, no matter how seemingly insignificant,..." Read more
"...detracted from my enjoyment of the work, and given the absence of any unifying element, raises the question of what he hoped to achieve, other than..." Read more
"...It also helped point out details that I may have never noticed, which I’m incredibly grateful for. (Dee’s twitter handle is @dh_editorial)." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's pacing. Some find it well-paced, with action and suspense. They appreciate the author's ability to weave his readers with eloquence and yet deliver messages. However, others find the first section uninteresting and dull, while others find the second half more engaging.
"...The absence of a unifying theme or common element actually works against the enjoyment of the stories...." Read more
"...and his lack of fear in putting a message in his books and making his reader THINK...." Read more
"...I’m not saying the book isn’t enjoyable. It is, and I did, but perhaps not in the same way that I enjoy my favourites...." Read more
"...and look at our human existence, it seems so cruel, chaotic and meaningless; individuals and their fights seem trivial amidst the transience of all..." Read more
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It's Complicated
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2013Cloud Atlas is not perfect by any means (I'll get to what I see as its main flaws in a minute) but credit must be given where credit is due: it is the most ambitious, thought-provoking, entertaining, and imaginative work I've read in a good while. To do a review of it justice, certain "spoilers" must be revealed below ... so let the reader beware.
In my description above, I intentionally used the word "ambitious" first. When "The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing" is chopped off mid-sentence after just a couple dozen pages and we are transported abruptly to 1930s Belgium, the reader knows that he or she is in for a long, roller coaster of a ride. Each of the six stories begins in medias res, in fact, and in almost every case, the stories use dialect and are in a context foreign enough that it takes real concentration and focus on the part of the reader to follow along. Mitchell, after all, has something important to say, and in return for revealing his wisdom, he expects the reader to put some effort into reading his work. Each story, while a different genre, is remarkably rich in detail--one of Mitchell's strengths is the ability to so thoroughly and convincingly create a universe and characters that the reader feels as if he is strolling along the drafty corridors of Chateau Zedelghem with Robert Frobisher or at sea in the cramped "coffin" (cabin) of Adam Ewing. In fact, for the first half of the novel, one finds oneself acclimating to one world only to be transported to another just as soon as they have adjusted to the first. Certain sentences and passages are left untranslated or unexplained. One either finds his exhilarating or frustrating. As others have noted, this work is not for everyone--if you are looking for a "fun" read, or one that has only one level of meaning, look elsewhere. But for me, I found myself in the "exhilarated" camp. Diving into these rich, diverse worlds, trying to understand how they all fit together, gradually piecing together the puzzle of Mitchell's meaning ... Mitchell creates an adventure where the journey is as thrilling as the destination (each story, and the novel as a whole, tends to follow the pattern of a journey or quest). What is Mitchell's message? I'll let you read the book to find that out, but it is one that becomes clear as one reads the book ... and is even explicitly spelled out at several points (notably the last few pages of the Sloosha's Crossin' and Adam Ewing stories). Personally, having the message so explicitly written out was a bit heavy-handed and unnecessary for me--it was as if, having brought the reader along this far, Mitchell was afraid that the reader might leave without fully grasping what he was trying to say. Which, again, I felt was unnecessary given that the message was clear anyway--an author should not have to say "here's what it all means, folks!" if he has effectively conveyed the message through the story being told (which he has in this case, if the reader is attentive and committed to understanding the work).
The message is indeed profound, and important. However, another annoyance is how overtly and self-consciously Mitchell trumpets just how profound and important his message is; apotheosis is reached with the Robert Frobisher character's creation of the Cloud Atlas Sextet, which seems to be only a thinly-veiled metaphor for Mitchell's own creation. There are a number of self-conscious and self-referent moments that feel like a jarring breach of the fourth wall in an otherwise elaborately staged production. At these times I just wanted Mitchell to let his work speak for itself and its brilliance to be judged by the reader. Other flaws: although I enjoyed each of the six stories, some worked better for me than others--I felt that while all started brilliantly, only some finished brilliantly. Despite my grumblings about the Mitchell-Frobisher links, I found the psychological intensity of the Frobisher character to be remarkable; once I penetrated the dialect, Sloosha's Crossin' was rewarding as the first step in really tying everything together (as the other bookend to the story, I enjoyed Adam Ewing for the same reason). To this day, the most haunting and memorable story for me was that of Sonmi-451. The interrogatory style, the brutal satire of democratic capitalism through the portrayal of "corpocracy" as a near-future vision of the path we are on, the deceptions within deceptions and chilling revelations ... I felt that in terms of the plot, characters, and message it was perhaps the best of the lot as a self-contained story in and of itself. Other stories I enjoyed, but did not find quite as moving: Luisa Rey was fun as a hardboiled crime/detective novel (and a nice setup for the corpocracy of Sonmi-451) but felt a bit forgettable otherwise; for me, at least, Timothy Cavendish struggled to find the right balance between humor and seriousness. Of course, others will find other stories more or less gripping than me, that is the nature of this kind of genre-bending work.
Despite these complaints, I really did love Cloud Atlas despite its flaws. This was the first book of Mitchell's that I have read, but it has led me to seek out others. I greatly admire his ambition, his willingness to place expectations on the reader, his ability to create a rich world and complex characters to inhabit them, and his lack of fear in putting a message in his books and making his reader THINK. I would probably give this book 4 1/2 stars instead of 5 if I could, but I give no hesitation in my 5 star review: even if Mitchell occasionally falls short of his ambitions, bravo to him for writing real literature in an age where the bestseller lists are topped by the likes of Fifty Shades of Grey.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2013Cloud Atlas is a collection of six seemingly unrelated vignettes, beginning with the story of an American Notary Public (apparently quite a prestigious position for the era) in the 19th century South Pacific seas. The stories proceed chronologically through the present day and into a post-apocalyptic future set in Hawaii. At that point, they reverse, revisit and complete the previously told stories.
The technique used in the novel is certainly interesting, and given the proper set of stories and linchpins, could have been intriguing. However, the stories are, in fact, not related in any way and only tied together by the loosest of references. Therefore, what we have are six short stories (novellas) which are split in two. The absence of a unifying theme or common element actually works against the enjoyment of the stories. For example, the first story, involving the sea voyaging American Notary Public proceeds for roughly 40 pages before ending mid-sentence. Four hundred pages later it takes up again mid-sentence.
With the exception of the final two stories, which are begun and finished relatively close together because of the nature of the serpentine order, the reader is tasked to recall the names, locations and fact situations that existed and were then abandoned hundreds of pages earlier.
I found the stories themselves to be quite well written and enjoyable. The fifth, focusing on a dystopian Korean society in the not distant future, featuring a sub class of manufactured drones, some of which are attaining increased sentience, was brilliant. The final vignette, set in post-apocalyptic Hawaii, I found to be irritating, due to the pidgin English employed. It is as if nuclear Armageddon will somehow convert the survivors into back woods hillbillies as it relates to the English language.
In any event, the stories were entertaining and at times compelling. The technique used by the author detracted from my enjoyment of the work, and given the absence of any unifying element, raises the question of what he hoped to achieve, other than originality. My advice is to read the first half of the first story, and when it switches to story number two, go to the back of the book and find where the story continues. Read each story in its entirety, chronologically. I cannot imagine what would be forfeited using such a strategy, and you'll enjoy the first three or four stories more fully.
UPDATE AFTER HAVING SEEN THE MOVIE:
I saw the movie after having read the book, and am glad I did so. I cannot imagine enjoying or even understanding the movie without having read the book first. Unlike in the book, where the stories are essentially split in half, the movie switches back and forth between the six stories repeatedly and in no particular order.
After seeing the movie, I have a far greater appreciation for the book. By using the same actors in different roles throughout the six stories, the unifying theme which I was not able to discern while reading the book became more apparent.
In order to maximize enjoyment of the experience, read the book THEN see the movie. In that combination, this is a five star experience.
Top reviews from other countries
Kirtiman DasReviewed in India on May 12, 20225.0 out of 5 stars Imaginative and Powerful
The book arrived in perfect condition, and ever since I saw the movie (which I loved), I have been trying to get my hands on the movie tie-in edition. The story, as you know, is concerned with 6 characters across 6 different time periods, all of them the same incarnation of one soul. The author has a huge imagination with which he vividly paints 1880s Pacific Trade to 2140s Neo Seoul, each with their own language and (supposedly) culture, making whatever we read a very lived in world. It might be a tedious for a newbie who is instantly expecting high drama and action, but take some time and allow the words to soak in, you won't regret it.
The book arrived in perfect condition, and ever since I saw the movie (which I loved), I have been trying to get my hands on the movie tie-in edition. The story, as you know, is concerned with 6 characters across 6 different time periods, all of them the same incarnation of one soul. The author has a huge imagination with which he vividly paints 1880s Pacific Trade to 2140s Neo Seoul, each with their own language and (supposedly) culture, making whatever we read a very lived in world. It might be a tedious for a newbie who is instantly expecting high drama and action, but take some time and allow the words to soak in, you won't regret it.5.0 out of 5 stars
Kirtiman DasImaginative and Powerful
Reviewed in India on May 12, 2022
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LS (ITA)Reviewed in the Netherlands on January 16, 20223.0 out of 5 stars Lost plot
Surely a remarkable writing endeavour - albeit too baroque at times…
… unfinished, unfortunately.
What’s an intriguing, elusive build up of a complex plot, deflate disappointingly in the last couple of pages, with the author just giving his vision for a better world.
This book delivers on many levels…
… the ending is not there.
Jesus EduardoReviewed in Mexico on August 1, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Great book <3
I was hooked with David's: The Bone Clocks and thus decided to buy this one, and all I have to say is that it is highly worth it.
Stuart J.Reviewed in Australia on March 2, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Best book and Movie 🎥 ever
Brings the magic of reincarnation to life in a great world changing story.
Bruno AccioliReviewed in Brazil on February 3, 20175.0 out of 5 stars My favorite book!
Cloud Atlas is definitely the best book I've ever read. The way Mitchell wrote this book is amazing. Each story has a different narrative is almost as a new book but connected with one another.
The hardcover edition is beautiful.






