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Cloud Atlas

Cloud Atlas
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  • List Price: £8.99
  • Buy New: £1.99
  • as of 20/5/2012 16:33 CDT details
  • You Save: £7.00 (78%)
In Stock
  • Seller:Suziii
  • Sales Rank:8,584
  • Languages:English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published)
  • Media:Paperback
  • Pages:544
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.8
  • Dimensions (in):7.7 x 4.9 x 1.3
  • Publication Date:February 21, 2005
  • ISBN:0340822783
  • EAN:9780340822784
  • ASIN:0340822783
Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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  • Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon
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Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
Used book in good condition/Pages very gently aged-tanned/Défraîchi, traces d'usage mais sinon ok.Expédition rapide de votre commande avec protection soignée de vos articles.Professionnel de la vente à distance.Professionnal on e-business.Fast delivery of your order.Item very well packed.(réf 94)
Amazon.co.uk Review
It's hard not to become ensnared by words beginning with the letter B, when attempting to describe Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell's third novel. It's a big book, for start, bold in scope and execution--a bravura literary performance, possibly. (Let's steer clear of breathtaking for now.) Then, of course, Mitchell was among Granta's Best of Young British Novelists and his second novel number9dreamwas shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Characters with birthmarks in the shape of comets are a motif; as are boats. Oh and one of the six narratives strands of the book--where coincidentally Robert Frobisher, a young composer, dreams up "a sextet for overlapping soloists" entitled Cloud Atlas--is set in Belgium, not far from Bruges. (See what I mean?)

Structured rather akin to a Chinese puzzle or a set of Matrioshka dolls, there are dazzling shifts in genre and voice and the stories leak into each other with incidents and people being passed on like batons in a relay race. The 19th-century journals of an American notary in the Pacific that open the novel are subsequently unearthed 80 years later on by Frobisher in the library of the ageing, syphilitic maestro he's trying to fleece. Frobisher's waspish letters to his old Cambridge crony, Rufus Sexsmith, in turn surface when Rufus, (by the 1970s a leading nuclear scientist) is murdered. A novelistic account of the journalist Luisa Rey's investigation into Rufus' death finds its way to Timothy Cavendish, a London vanity publisher with an author who has an ingenious method of silencing a snide reviewer. And in a near-dystopian Blade Runner-esque future, a genetically engineered fast food waitress sees a movie based on Cavendish's unfortunate internment in a Hull retirement home. (Cavendish himself wonders how a director called Lars might wish to tackle his plight). All this is less tricky than it sounds, only the lone "Zachary" chapter, told in Pacific Islander dialect (all "dingos'n'ravens", "brekker" and "f'llowin'"s) is an exercise in style too far. Not all the threads quite connect but nonetheless Mitchell binds them into a quite spellbinding rumination on human nature, power, oppression, race, colonialism and consumerism. --Travis Elborough


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