David Mitchell is the award-winning and bestselling author of The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, Black Swan Green, Cloud Atlas, Number9Dream, and Ghostwritten. Twice shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, Mitchell was named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time in 2007. With KA Yoshida, Mitchell translated from the Japanese the internationally bestselling memoir The Reason I Jump. He lives in Ireland with his wife and two children.
One of the most entertaining and thrilling novels I ve read in a
long time. Meg Wolitzer, NPR
Astonishing . . . No one, clearly, has ever told [David] Mitchell
that the novel is dead. He writes with a furious intensity and
slapped-awake vitality, with a delight in language and all the
rabbit holes of experience. . . . In his sixth novel, he s brought
together the time-capsule density of his eyes-wide-open adventure
in traditional realism with the death-defying ambitions ofCloud
Atlasuntil all borders between pubby England and the
machinations of the undead begin to blur. . . . Not many novelists
could take on plausible Aboriginal speech, imagine a world after
climate change has ravaged it and wonder whether whales suffer from
unrequited love. . . . Very few [writers] excite the reader about
both the visceral world and the visionary one as Mitchell does.
The New York Times Book Review(Editor s Choice)
Intensely compelling . . . fantastically witty . . . offers up a
rich selection of domestic realism, gothic fantasy and apocalyptic
speculation. The Washington Post
Sprawling yet disciplined, drunk on life but ever cognizant of its
brevity and preciousness, this time-traveling, culture-crossing,
genre-bending marvel of a novel by the highly regarded author
ofCloud Atlasutterly beguiles. O: The Oprah
Magazine
Great fun . . . a tour de force . . . [Mitchell] channels his
narrators with vivid expertise. San Francisco Chronicle
Mitchell is one of the most electric writers alive. To open a
Mitchell book is to set forth on an adventure. . . . In his latest
novel, The Bone Clocks, Mitchell has spun his most far-flung tale
yet. . . . Strange and magical. The Boston Globe
Magical . . . [The Bone Clocks] perfectly illustrates the
idea that we re all the heroes of our own lives as well as single
cogs in a much larger and more beautiful mechanism. [Grade: ] A
Entertainment Weekly
Transportingly great. . . If David Mitchell isn t the most talented
novelist of his generation, is there any doubt that he is the most
multi-talented? He is, at his best, a superior writer to Jonathan
Franzen, a better storyteller than Michael Chabon, more wickedly
clever than Jennifer Egan, nearly as fluent as Junot Diaz in
multiple dialects, and as gifted as Alice Munro. . . .The Bone
Clocksaffords its readers the singular gift of reading the wish
to stay put and to be nowhere else but here. The Atlantic
Mitchell s mesmerizing saga is evidence of the power of story to
transport us, and even to stop time entirely. Vanity Fair
[A] literary marvel . . . What we value defines us, The Bone Clocks
tells us. Sometimes it s life. Sometimes it s love. It s definitely
this book. The Miami Herald
Mitchell s wit, imagination and gorgeous prose make this a
page-turner. People
Mind-bendingly ambitious . . . The force of [Mitchell s]
storytelling makes The Bone Clocks a joy. Time
A tour de force of the imagination, rewarding the attentive reader
with both the intricate richness of its plot and the beauty of its
language. The Plain Dealer
Told with the skill and nuance of a gifted ventriloquist. USA
Today
Mitchell rises to meet and match the legacy of Cloud Atlas. Los
Angeles Times
Reading a David Mitchell novel is a little like wandering through a
multiplex during that September sweet spot when the best summer
blockbusters are screened alongside autumn s more serious fare. The
Bone Clocks is no exception. Mitchell s generous imagination
saturates every sentence, character, and setting to create a story
as thrilling in its language as in its plot. It s my favorite novel
I ve read this year, and the only one I ve already reread.
Anthony Marra
Great story, great words, all good. Stephen King
A hell of a great read . . . wild, funny, terrifying . . . a
slipstream masterpiece all its own . . . Mitchell is a
genre-bending, time-leaping, world-traveling, puzzle-making,
literary magician, and The Bone Clocks is one of his best books.
Esquire
Mitchell is a superb storyteller. . . . One of the reasons he is
such a popular and critically lauded writer is that he combines
both the giddy, freewheeling ceaselessness of the pure storyteller
with the grounded realism of the humanist. There s something for
everyone, traditionalist or postmodernist, realist or fantasist.
The New Yorker
Relentlessly brilliant . . . [The Bone Clockscontains]
depth and darkness, bravely concealed with all the wit and sleight
of hand and ventriloquistic verbiage and tale-telling bravura of
which Mitchell is a master. Ursula K. Le Guin, The
Guardian
You could call Mitchell a global writer, I suppose, but that does
not quite capture what he is doing. It is closer to say that he is
a pangaeic writer, a supercontinental writer. New York
With The Bone Clocks [Mitchell] has brought off his most sinewy,
fine and full book to date, a Mobius strip tripping great novel
that will reward bleary-eyed rereading until he writes his next
one. Financial Times
Dazzling . . . Mitchell s heavy arsenal of talents is showcased in
these pages: his symphonic imagination; his ventriloquist s ability
to channel the voices of myriad characters from different time
zones and cultures; his intuitive understanding of children and
knack for capturing their solemnity and humor; and his ear for
language its rhythms, sounds and inflections. Michiko Kakutani,
The New York Times
As you might expect from a David Mitchell novel, [The Bone
Clocks is] big, ambitious, and pretty. But it s very much the
story of one woman: Holly Sykes. Her tiny human life is the thread
that holds the various stories of The Bone Clocks together, and
ultimately it is what gives the book a deep sense of meaning, and
its lasting joys and sorrows. The Millions
[The Bone Clocks] might just become the 1984 of the climate
change movement. It dramatizes the consequences of our improvident
modern economy in the way George Orwell s novel awakened people to
the Big Brother mentality of Soviet communism. David Ignatius,
The Washington Post
[The Bone Clocks] enthralls, soars, and crackles. The
Daily Beast
Mitchell is back and as genre-bendy as ever. Describing the breadth
of his latest epic as sprawling wouldn t quite do it justice.
The Huffington Post
Deeply meaningful. . .The Bone Clocks has everything you
might expect to find in a David Mitchell novel: Great characters in
settings far-flung over space and time, all tied together by
ambitious ideas and gorgeous writing. BuzzFeed
Mitchell may be the greatest novelist in the English language
currently in his prime. The A.V. Club
A fascinating and moving book about time, technology and even the
State of the World. The Dallas Morning News
Mitchell is a brilliant literary mesmerist. . . . He writes with
scintillating verve and abundance. . . . [Mitchell s is a] joyful,
consoling world. The Telegraph
A fantastic, perilous journey over continents and decades. Fans of
Mitchell sCloud Atlaswill find this equally ambitious and
mind-bending. Marie Claire
[A] beautiful explosion of adventurous ideas . . . As [Mitchell s]
oeuvre develops, he seems to be getting cleverer, braver and
delightfully madder. The Times
Fantastical, ambitious, bold and exuberant. The Observer
A sweeping epic . . . that, like Cloud Atlas, spans the ages and
tinkers with the hidden gears of human history. GQ
A cautionary metaphysical thriller that grounds its ambition in its
heroine s human charm. Vogue"
"One of the most entertaining and thrilling novels I've read in a
long time."--Meg Wolitzer,
NPR
"Astonishing . . . No one, clearly, has ever told [David]
Mitchell that the novel is dead. He writes with a furious intensity
and slapped-awake vitality, with a delight in language and all the
rabbit holes of experience. . . . In his sixth novel, he's brought
together the time-capsule density of his eyes-wide-open adventure
in traditional realism with the death-defying ambitions of Cloud
Atlasuntil all borders between pubby England and the
machinations of the undead begin to blur. . . . Not many novelists
could take on plausible Aboriginal speech, imagine a world after
climate change has ravaged it and wonder whether whales suffer from
unrequited love. . . . Very few [writers] excite the reader about
both the visceral world and the visionary one as Mitchell
does."--The New York Times Book Review (Editor's Choice)
"Intensely compelling . . . fantastically witty . . . offers up a
rich selection of domestic realism, gothic fantasy and apocalyptic
speculation."--The Washington Post "Sprawling yet disciplined,
drunk on life but ever cognizant of its brevity and preciousness,
this time-traveling, culture-crossing, genre-bending marvel of a
novel by the highly regarded author of Cloud Atlas utterly
beguiles."--O: The Oprah Magazine
"Great fun . . . a tour de force . . . [Mitchell] channels his
narrators with vivid expertise."--San Francisco Chronicle
"Mitchell is one of the most electric writers alive. To open a
Mitchell book is to set forth on an adventure. . . . In his latest
novel, The Bone Clocks, Mitchell has spun his most far-flung tale
yet. . . . Strange and magical."--The Boston Globe "Magical .
. . [The Bone Clocks] perfectly illustrates the idea that
we're all the heroes of our own lives as well as single cogs in a
much larger and more beautiful mechanism. [Grade: ]
A"--Entertainment Weekly "Transportingly great . . . If David
Mitchell isn't the most talented novelist of his generation, is
there any doubt that he is the most multi-talented? He is, at his
best, a superior writer to Jonathan Franzen, a better storyteller
than Michael Chabon, more wickedly clever than Jennifer Egan,
nearly as fluent as Junot Diaz in multiple dialects, and as gifted
as Alice Munro. . . . The Bone Clocks affords its readers the
singular gift of reading--the wish to stay put and to be nowhere
else but here."--The Atlantic
"Mitchell's mesmerizing saga is evidence of the power of story to
transport us, and even to stop time entirely."--Vanity Fair
"[A] literary marvel . . . What we value defines us, The Bone
Clocks tells us. Sometimes it's life. Sometimes it's love. It's
definitely this book."--The Miami Herald
"Mitchell's wit, imagination and gorgeous prose make this a
page-turner."--People
"Mind-bendingly ambitious . . . The force of [Mitchell's]
storytelling makes The Bone Clocks a joy."--Time "A tour de
force of the imagination, rewarding the attentive reader with both
the intricate richness of its plot and the beauty of its
language."--The Plain Dealer
"Told with the skill and nuance of a gifted ventriloquist."--USA
Today
"Mitchell rises to meet and match the legacy of Cloud Atlas."--Los
Angeles Times "Reading a David Mitchell novel is a little like
wandering through a multiplex during that September sweet spot when
the best summer blockbusters are screened alongside autumn's more
serious fare. The Bone Clocks is no exception. Mitchell's generous
imagination saturates every sentence, character, and setting to
create a story as thrilling in its language as in its plot. It's my
favorite novel I've read this year, and the only one I've already
reread."--Anthony Marra "Great story, great words, all
good."--Stephen King "A hell of a great read . . . wild,
funny, terrifying . . . a slipstream masterpiece all its own . . .
Mitchell is a genre-bending, time-leaping, world-traveling,
puzzle-making, literary magician, and The Bone Clocks is one of his
best books."--Esquire
"Mitchell is a superb storyteller. . . . One of the reasons he is
such a popular and critically lauded writer is that he combines
both the giddy, freewheeling ceaselessness of the pure storyteller
with the grounded realism of the humanist. There's something for
everyone, traditionalist or postmodernist, realist or
fantasist."--The New Yorker "Relentlessly brilliant . . .
[The Bone Clocks contains] depth and darkness, bravely
concealed with all the wit and sleight of hand and ventriloquistic
verbiage and tale-telling bravura of which Mitchell is a
master."--Ursula K. Le Guin, The Guardian "You could call
Mitchell a global writer, I suppose, but that does not quite
capture what he is doing. It is closer to say that he is a pangaeic
writer, a supercontinental writer."--New York
"With The Bone Clocks [Mitchell] has brought off his most sinewy,
fine and full book to date, a Mobius strip-tripping great novel
that will reward bleary-eyed rereading until he writes his next
one."--Financial Times "Dazzling . . . Mitchell's heavy
arsenal of talents is showcased in these pages: his symphonic
imagination; his ventriloquist's ability to channel the voices of
myriad characters from different time zones and cultures; his
intuitive understanding of children and knack for capturing their
solemnity and humor; and his ear for language--its rhythms, sounds
and inflections."--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
"As you might expect from a David Mitchell novel, [The Bone
Clocks is] big, ambitious, and pretty. But it's very much the
story of one woman: Holly Sykes. Her tiny human life is the thread
that holds the various stories of The Bone Clocks together, and
ultimately it is what gives the book a deep sense of meaning, and
its lasting joys and sorrows."--The Millions "[The Bone
Clocks] might just become the 1984 of the climate change
movement. It dramatizes the consequences of our improvident modern
economy in the way George Orwell's novel awakened people to the
'Big Brother' mentality of Soviet communism."--David Ignatius,
The Washington Post "[The Bone Clocks] enthralls, soars,
and crackles."--The Daily Beast "Mitchell is back and as
genre-bendy as ever. Describing the breadth of his latest epic as
'sprawling' wouldn't quite do it justice."--The Huffington
Post
"Deeply meaningful . . . The Bone Clocks has everything you might
expect to find in a David Mitchell novel: Great characters in
settings far-flung over space and time, all tied together by
ambitious ideas and gorgeous writing."--BuzzFeed "Mitchell
may be the greatest novelist in the English language currently in
his prime."--The A.V. Club
"A fascinating and moving book about time, technology and even the
'State of the World.'"--The Dallas Morning News "Mitchell is
a brilliant literary mesmerist. . . . He writes with scintillating
verve and abundance. . . . [Mitchell's is a] joyful, consoling
world."--The Telegraph
"A fantastic, perilous journey over continents and decades. Fans of
Mitchell's Cloud Atlas will find this equally ambitious and
mind-bending."--Marie Claire "[A] beautiful explosion of
adventurous ideas . . . As [Mitchell's] oeuvre develops, he seems
to be getting cleverer, braver and delightfully madder."--The
Times "Fantastical, ambitious, bold and exuberant."--The
Observer "A sweeping epic . . . that, like Cloud Atlas, spans the
ages and tinkers with the hidden gears of human
history."--GQ
"A cautionary metaphysical thriller that grounds its ambition in
its heroine's human
charm."--Vogue
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