[The Bone Clocks] By David Mitchell The Bone Clocks

BONE-CLOCKS

ISBN:
979-11-306-0462-6
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (11 reviews)

1 edition

Review of '[The Bone Clocks] By David Mitchell The Bone Clocks' on 'Storygraph'

2 stars

I’m a huge fan of David Mitchell. I’ve always admired his ability to created characters with various and compelling voices. This was particularly true of Ghostwritten, Cloud Atlas, and Black Swan Green.

The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet was a departure. As I wrote at the time, Mitchell was playing with the idea of the idea of evil. It was an examination of how best to respond to pure evil.

He continues that exploration in The Bone Clocks. Here, though, the evil has become less nuanced. (In fairness there is one exception to this.)

As I read through the book, I realised that although the characters were somewhat interesting, their voices weren’t nearly as compelling as Mitchell’s previous characters. I was disappointed and bemused.

As I reached the end of the book, I realised that these two things—pure evil and lacklustre voices—were related. When the antagonists of a story …

Review of '[The Bone Clocks] By David Mitchell The Bone Clocks' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

A book with excellent sweep and storytelling panache. Also, in its final chapters, a potential companion volume for Learning to Die in the Anthropocene. I enjoy fantasy novels that soft-pedal their fantastic elements, and Mitchell barely lets you know what's going on until the book is two-thirds done. Mitchell works very hard, here and in Cloud Atlas, to break out of the standard novel format where three characters take turns in alternating chapters, and he's very successful.

Review of '[The Bone Clocks] By David Mitchell The Bone Clocks' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

This is going to be a short review, because anything I say will spoil the story and frankly, this is one of those times the less said the better. Just read it. It's great.

My only problem (if it can be considered that), and don't read this far if you do plan on reading the book, was the ending. I felt like the last section of the story was leading up to the possibility of a sequel, which is kind of annoying.

Other than that, I really enjoyed this book. It was weird and compelling and beautiful. And I seriously can't describe more of it, I've lost the ability.

I won this copy as a Goodreads First Reads Giveway.

avatar for kataract

rated it

4 stars
avatar for suzidarling

rated it

5 stars
avatar for dria

rated it

4 stars
avatar for Jorn

rated it

3 stars
avatar for gregorygandy

rated it

4 stars
avatar for jumbanho

rated it

4 stars