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
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.
Annie Proulxs Accordion Crimes offers a portrait of the accordion as protagonist; David Mitchells Cloud Atlas structures itself in the shape of an accordion with the first and last sections as bookends squeezing the intervening musical narratives. Relying less on traditional subplot than on more experimental multiple plots, Cloud Atlas covers large tracts of time and space between Mitchells own islands of England (his birthplace) and Japan (where he has taught for several years). He continues in the vein of his earlier novels, Ghostwritten and Number9Dream, shape-shifting the genre under the influence of A.S. Byatt, Nabokov, Calvino, and Martin Amiss Times Arrow. A ventriloquist and mime artist, Mitchell presses the keys of his polyphonic instrument, for the Cloud Atlas Sextet is a musical score composed by one of his characters in the second and penultimate sections of the novel, Letter from Zedelghem.
In these sections, composer Robert Frobisher writes letters from Belgium in 1931 to his friend Sixsmith in England. Bisexual Frobisher comments on his sextet to Sixsmith: Spent the fortnight gone in the music room, reworking my years fragments into a sextet for overlapping soloists: piano, clarinet, cello, flute, oboe, and violin, each solo is interrupted by its successor: in the second, each interruption is recontinued, in order. Revolutionary or gimmicky? In this musical mise en abyme, Mitchell puts his finger on the key to Cloud Atlas.
The first and final sections of the novel are The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing. The events take place in 1850 during Ewings sailing from New Zealands Chatham Islands to his home in California. From the opening moment-Beyond the Indian hamlet, upon a forlorn strand, I happened on a trail of recent footprints-Ewing is Crusoeing on a familiar exotic path where he meets Dr. Henry Goose. After they yarn, Ewing listens to the cleric DArnoq, who offers a history of the Maori and Moriori tribes: His spoken history, for my money, holds company with the pen of a Defoe or Melville. Hand in hand with this marine odyssey, wherein lawyer Ewing attempts to return to his wife and son, is a metaphysical journey of discovery: As many truths as men. Occasionally I glimpse a truer Truth, hiding in imperfect simulacrums of itself, but as I approach, it becomes itself and moves deeper into the thorny swamp of dissent. This statement of ambivalence points to the shifting structure of Cloud Atlas and the instability of Ewings mind, a result of parasitic infection.
The last journal entry of this section is dated Sunday, 8th December, and breaks off in medias res. The reader may choose to continue with the next section, Letter from Zedelghem, which begins 29th - VI - 1931, or skip toward the end of the novel to pick up the Ewing thread. The first part ends with Dr. Goose and Ewing engaged in Bible reading, astraddle the forenoon and morning watches so both starboard and port shifts might
More than 400 pages later the sentence is completed:
join us. The straddled yarn is seamlessly joined, even as the ship crosses the equator and Ewings mind hovers between madness and death. At once master narrative and postcolonial pastiche of smaller tales, Cloud Atlas ends with a question, Yet what is any ocean but a multitude of drops?
A drop in the Pacific leads to the opening dream in Zedelghem: Dreamt I stood in a china shop so crowded from floor to far-off ceiling with shelves of porcelain antiquities. In Frobishers dream these porcelain antiques fall and smash to bits, creating chords of music. From a multitude of ocean drops to bits of porcelain music, the clouds of this novel open in different directions.
Quite by chance, Frobisher comes across a curious dismembered volume: From what little I can glean, its the edited journal of a voyage from Sydney to California by a notary of San Francisco named Adam Ewing. Frobisher senses something shifty about the journals authenticity, and this shiftiness recurs in each section of Cloud Atlas. Frobisher compares a half-read book to a half-finished love affair, and in the second half of Letter from Zedelghem he comes across a ripped-in-two volume under one of the legs of his bed: Sure enough- The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing. From the interrupted page to the end of the first volume. Mitchells postmodern narrative interruptus foregrounds the materiality of the text-a book props up a bed, a structure its subject, and an accordion its musical interludes.
Frobisher addresses his letters to Sixsmith in Cambridge. The next section of the novel, Half-Lives: The First Luisa Rey Mystery, begins in California with Rufus Sixsmith contemplating suicide. Cloud Atlas consists of several half-lives, each on the threshold of suicide, each nudging the next in a dominos ripple. The Luisa Rey Mystery is a fast-paced Hollywood thriller involving corrupt corporations and a hit man, Bill Smoke, who chases reporter Luisa Rey because she has access to Sixsmiths scientific report that points out the dangers of a power plant. Before leaving California for England, Sixsmith phones the Lost Chord Music Store to inquire after a rare recording of Frobishers Cloud Atlas Sextet. Mitchell sets up the artifice of coincidence in this music shop: A Sephardic romance, composed before the expulsion of the Jews from Spain, fills the Lost Chord Music Store on the northwest corner of Spinoza Square and Sixth Avenue.
Wandering Jews, narrative, and music overlap in Mitchells inquisition into Americas corporate wrongdoings. Luisa comments, Its a small world. It keeps recrossing itself.
Cloud Atlass cats cradle next switches to The Ghastly Ordeal of Timothy Cavendish where violence and hiding recur in contemporary England. Leafing through the pages of Half-Lives when his train breaks down in Essex, Cavendish reflects: we cross, crisscross, and recross our old tracks like figure skaters. He is Mitchells tongue-in-cheek mouthpiece: As an experienced editor, I disapprove of flashbacks, foreshadowings, and tricksy devices; they belong in the 1980s with M.A.s in postmodernism and chaos theory. He wishes to possess an atlas of clouds-the paradox of ephemeral permanence, a fixed illusion that slips through the fingers. The clouds that float above each page are markers of sorts, like the crescent scars that so many of the characters have in common.
The middle sections of the novel, An Orison of Somni-451 and Slooshas Crossin An Evrythin After are more difficult to follow in their dialects, and the readers mind tends to drift in these sections-sour notes in an otherwise tour de force with overkill.
Michael Greenstein (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.