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by David Mitchell
In a word (or two or three): i'm not sure if i'm incredibly hip, or just a big dork, for reading this book
From Mr. Hipster:
This guy is so talented it's ridiculous.
He's like Philip
K. Dick without the mental problems--or if he has them, he masks
them well in his incredibly structured novels. My first exposure to
Mitchell was Ghostwritten,
an amazing book that pushed the boundaries of my comprehension levels
(which isn't that hard). This novel uses a similar narrative structure
to that one; telling an unfolding series of stories that are loosely
tied together through recurring elements. This one is a little different
in that we start with one story, which eventually is interrupted and
goes on to the next. Which, in turn is interrupted by the story that
follows it. We don't really understand why these stories are cut short
until we reach the peak of our ascent, and start down the other side
of the mountain, revisiting the same stories in reverse order, each
picking up where they left off because of the story before it. It's
a more simple concept than I'm explaining here, and the tales themselves
are a bit more straight-forward than those in Ghostwritten.
For that reason, it's a little bit of a less challenging read, but
it also makes it a more solid book all around. The different narratives
unfold in chronological order, starting in the 1980s, and peaking
in the way distant future, only to come back through time and end
back in the 1980s with the characters from the first story. It's as
if each narrative was written by a different author, as the styles
and themes vary so widely. He's obviously at ease writing in each
different style, although his more futuristic, science-fiction stuff
is just amazing--and does have a bit of a Dick quality about it. Other
stories' styles vary from an almost Western thing, a la Cormac McCarthy,
something out of a Conrad novel and even a corporate espionage thing
that smacks of Grisham (in a self-aware kind of way). This is not
to say he's an imitator. Quite the opposite, really. This book is
totally original and an awesome read. I'm still kind of processing
the whole thing, but it has certainly moved up into my favorite-of-the-past-while
stack. I can feel another Amazon trip in my future for Number9Dream.
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Black Swan Green
Ghostwritten
Number9Dream
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