Editors Reads
Literary FictionScience FictionFantasy

David Mitchell

British · b. 1969

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.1 / 5Top rating 4.2 / 5

Man Booker Prize shortlist (multiple), ALA Notable Book

David Mitchell is a British novelist known for structurally ambitious, genre-bending fiction that connects across centuries and voices, most famously in Cloud Atlas and The Bone Clocks.

David Mitchell is a British novelist who lived for years in Japan and whose work bears the influence of both Western postmodernism and Japanese narrative traditions. He is among the most formally inventive English-language novelists of his generation, and Cloud Atlas, published in 2004, is the most celebrated demonstration of his structural ambition. The novel contains six narratives spanning from the nineteenth century to a post-apocalyptic future, each nested within the next like Russian dolls, connected by recurring characters and themes about power, exploitation, and the persistence of the human spirit. Some readers find the formal game thrilling; others find it distancing.

The Bone Clocks, published in 2014, follows the life of a British woman named Holly Sykes across six decades, pulling together a more overt fantasy element involving rival factions of near-immortals. It is less formally radical than Cloud Atlas but in some ways more emotionally involving — the thread of Holly’s ordinary human life through the more fantastical material gives the novel genuine pathos. The contemporary sections are sharply observed and often funny, while the ending gestures toward environmental catastrophe with a kind of quiet devastation.

Mitchell is occasionally accused of over-complication for its own sake, and his more fantastical elements do not always integrate as cleanly as his advocates suggest. But his ambition is genuine, his prose is accomplished, and his ability to inhabit a range of voices and genres across a single career makes him one of the more interesting novelists working in English today.

5 Books Reviewed

Black Swan Green book cover

Black Swan Green

by David Mitchell

4.2

Thirteen-year-old Jason Taylor navigates a year of his life in a small Worcestershire village in 1982 — a stammer, a dissolving marriage, and the specific brutality of adolescent social hierarchies.

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Cloud Atlas book cover
Editor's Pick

Cloud Atlas

by David Mitchell

4.1

Six nested stories spanning centuries — from a 19th-century Pacific voyage to a post-apocalyptic Hawaii — each one influencing the next in a meditation on power, predacity, and civilization.

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The Bone Clocks book cover

The Bone Clocks

by David Mitchell

4.1

A girl's impulsive act in 1984 draws her into a centuries-long conflict between two secret factions; the novel spans her entire life across six decades.

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The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet book cover
4.1

Dejima, 1799: the Dutch trading post is the only window between Japan and the Western world. Clerk Jacob de Zoet arrives hoping to restore his family's fortune and falls in love with a Japanese midwife student. Mitchell's most disciplined novel is a masterwork of historical fiction.

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The Utopia Avenue book cover

The Utopia Avenue

by David Mitchell

4.0

A fictional British rock band in 1967 London — Utopia Avenue — rises from Soho to the Royal Albert Hall and across America, with chapter-length songs as the structural unit and the actual music scene of 1967 as the setting.

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