REVIEW

Walking in the Literary Clouds with Cloud Atlas

Written by Tim Gebhart
Published May 23, 2005

Cloud Atlas is a novel perhaps unlike any other. In essence, British author David Mitchell links six novellas together in one fashion or another and, thus, seeks to form a whole.

The novel starts with the diary of an American traveling on a schooner in the South Pacific in the 1850s. The story suddenly (mid-sentence, in fact) shifts to 1930s Europe and a series of letters from a ne'er-do-well bisexual with ambitions of being a famous composer to a friend, Rufus Sixsmith. The next chapter is 1970s America, where Sixsmith is one of the focal points of a mystery/thriller with a reporter trying to investigate corporate wrongdoing. Just as we think the mystery is coming to an abrupt end, we jump to modern England and the memoir of the proprietor of a vanity press who thinks his estranged brother has confined him to a prison-like nursing home. Next, we are a couple centuries in the future and a dystopian, corporate-dominated Korea where the publisher's memoir plays a role in the life of a revolutionary. The revolutionary ends up also playing a role in the final novella, a story of survival in a post-apocalyptic Hawaii.

Yet the sixth novella is not the culmination of the book. By that point, the only story that has been completely told (or so it seems) is the sixth one. Mitchell then proceeds in reverse order back to the original diary of the seafaring American, completing the story begun previously in each novella. Each narrative could be separated from the others and read on its own because they are written in a different and unique style and voice. But each installment of each story lends something not only to the next, but also to the ones that preceded. Ultimately, the whole does become more than the sum of the parts.

Yet common facts are not the only threads that tie the stories together. Each explores a struggle, whether it be race against race or individual against government or corporate authority (alone or in combination), an unknown antagonist or even self.

The range of this book is demonstrated by the shortlists it made. These include the shortlist for the 2004 Man Booker Award, the 2004 National Book Critics Circle Award, the 2004 Nebula Awards and the 2005 Arthur C. Clarke Award. The scope of Cloud Atlas is as sweeping as the genres it employs. Ultimately, Mitchell's reach may exceed his grasp but the innovative approach and stylistic variety make you glad he made such an ambitious effort.

Tim Gebhart lives in Sioux Falls, SD, where he practices law in order to provide shelter for his family, his dog, and his books. His blog de guerre is A Progressive on the Prairie.
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Walking in the Literary Clouds with Cloud Atlas
Published: May 23, 2005
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: SF
Writer: Tim Gebhart
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Comments

#1 — May 23, 2005 @ 09:36AM — adam [URL]

Thanks, Tim. It's on my list of must-sees. Ambition is a good thing in a writer.

#2 — May 23, 2005 @ 14:43PM — DrPat [URL]

This sounds like it is written in Innis Mode, like Brunner's Stand on Zanzibar or Stephenson's Cryptonomicon and Quicksilver).

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