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wouterk's review against another edition
challenging
dark
emotional
inspiring
mysterious
reflective
sad
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
5.0
This book is a brilliant debut novel. As I've just finished the book I am still grappling to gather my thoughts and I also feel that reading it again will be a great idea. Both speak to the impact and intricacy of the book.
In Ghostwritten we are offerend a sequence of loosely but highly interconnected stories. It is an ambitious work as it not only follows over 10 perspectives, but each chapter also starts at different places and at slightly different places in time. Although for a large parts the chapters are chronological, within the chapters we als sometimes get different time lines. And every one of these intricacies serves an important purpose in the storytelling. Mitchell somehow knows how to sketch all these different persona's, their histories, professional context and geographical location very lively and succintly. It was a joy to find all the bigger and smaller connections between the stories.
At its core Ghostwritten is a very deterministic book. We see how each story influences the others in an unavoidable and profound way. Even a misplaced phone call can have its butterfly effect. Almost as a contradiction the book is also about human nature and the choices people make. Central to this human nature is the urge to connect to the world, to each other. I felt that most of the stories were about people who either are or feel lost, lonely and desperately looking for connection and meaning.
I found it sad, at times joyful and almost voyeuristic to see different characters on this journey. Similarly, we explore how the rules we give ourselves or are given, how identity and self-limitation influences our ability to connect.
I feel this book is truly a great exploration of the human condition and would recommend it to anyone who does not shy away from a modicum of complexity in a book. If you don't take my word for it, please read some of the other reviews here, as they may be more eloquent, elaborate or evocative. They are the reason I did not feel I needed to say more or think about my review any longer.
In Ghostwritten we are offerend a sequence of loosely but highly interconnected stories. It is an ambitious work as it not only follows over 10 perspectives, but each chapter also starts at different places and at slightly different places in time. Although for a large parts the chapters are chronological, within the chapters we als sometimes get different time lines. And every one of these intricacies serves an important purpose in the storytelling. Mitchell somehow knows how to sketch all these different persona's, their histories, professional context and geographical location very lively and succintly. It was a joy to find all the bigger and smaller connections between the stories.
At its core Ghostwritten is a very deterministic book. We see how each story influences the others in an unavoidable and profound way. Even a misplaced phone call can have its butterfly effect. Almost as a contradiction the book is also about human nature and the choices people make. Central to this human nature is the urge to connect to the world, to each other. I felt that most of the stories were about people who either are or feel lost, lonely and desperately looking for connection and meaning.
I found it sad, at times joyful and almost voyeuristic to see different characters on this journey. Similarly, we explore how the rules we give ourselves or are given, how identity and self-limitation influences our ability to connect.
I feel this book is truly a great exploration of the human condition and would recommend it to anyone who does not shy away from a modicum of complexity in a book. If you don't take my word for it, please read some of the other reviews here, as they may be more eloquent, elaborate or evocative. They are the reason I did not feel I needed to say more or think about my review any longer.
bookpat's review
adventurous
dark
funny
informative
lighthearted
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.25
patsmith139's review
3.0
I really enjoyed finding all the little clues that linked the people in the seemingly unrelated stories together. Some of the stories worked better than others and certainly some of the characters were more likeable and the more likeable ones did, generally, end up getting the better of things. There are several themes running through the book; music, how man destroys things and perhaps most importantly how so much of what happens to us, good or bad, is pure chance or serendipity. This a work of great imagination with some great writing and little touches of humour but sometimes, I think, it is a bit too clever and there are many references which will pass the general reader by. For that it looses one star, and it looses another for the weaker stories that were sometimes pedestrian and at others plain baffling.
huckabees222's review
5.0
David Mitchell is a completely mad genius. I don't think any other author could write a time and continent jumping book, with different narratives, including themes such as young love, transmigration spirits, and World War III, and have it come off half as good.
freddiealex2's review against another edition
2.5
Basically a short story compilation with some very loosely interconnecting. Most of them bored me with some being somewhat enjoyable. Thinks it’s more profound than it is.
horaklukas's review against another edition
4.0
Kniha mi formátem připadala dost podobná Atlasu mraků (který jsem pouze viděl jako film). Chvílli mi trvalo pochopit o co tady jde a dostat se do provázanosti dějové linky, ale jakmile se to stalo, absolutně mě děj pohltil. Knížka určitě stojí za přečtení a asi mi bude chvilku trvat než některé části vstřebám a rozleží se mi v hlavě jejich myšlenky.
stephwd's review
5.0
‘Ghostwritten’ is David Mitchell’s first novel (pre ‘Cloud Atlas’, which remains one of my favourite novels of all time despite the slightly dodgy film version that, as anticipated, failed to capture its epic style and generic melting pot of flavours). Yet this is a novel that announces Mitchell as a formidable literary force – a writer who refuses to follow convention of either linear plot or form. In fact, it is actually a series of 9 short stories that are intelligently woven together like the Lady of Shalott’s ‘magic web’ of delights.
It demands an attentive reader who must act as a kind of detective recognising the ways in which the stories (although seemingly entirely disparate) are actually subtly connected through imagery and narrative echoes. Yet this is not merely an intellectual exercise, there is such aesthetic beauty and poetry to Mitchell’s writing that demands the reader savour every word, every symbol, every nuance of his language – it announces itself as a work of art and Mitchell as a stunning writing.
What is also amazing is Mitchell’s ability to write in so many different voices. He is able to capture the banter of Bat Segundo – the late night radio chat show host with all his clichéd one liners and personal middle aged angst at the same time as Quasar, a Japanese cult member mentally meandering through the landscape of his mind. No voice is the same and his writing seems to have the ability to embody his characters (whether human or not) and make them entirely distinct. The scale of this novel is also epic. Much like ‘Cloud Atlas’ for which this seems to be the forerunner (Louisa Del Rey even makes a brief appearance for example and there are other recognisable connections), Mitchell covers a vast array of landscapes. He takes us on a journey from Japan, where he is able to capture the chaos of the stifling commuters jostling for space and the magic of the rural mountainscape and then to an art gallery in Russia followed swiftly by the disparate boroughs of London that were made at once familiar and yet entirely new as he forces us to see the worlds he creates with new eyes. Moreover, he seems to know each intimately and paint these worlds for the reader in a way that is at once both beautiful and often painfully realistic.
Yet at the heart of all this is a spiritual or moral dilemma about our ability to create our own worlds and stories and to what extent we are truly in control of our destiny and to what extent we are responsible for the destiny of others or indeed our planet. "The world is made of stories, not people. The people the stories use to tell themselves are not to be blamed."
I don’t want to write too much about this novel because it is so complex, it cannot really be defined by a review and I also feel my own words ultimately fall short in comparison to Mitchell’s creative genius. This is a novel that is inventive, unique, intellectual, philosophical and at heart, deeply beautiful and emotionally engaging. It took me a long time to read – a period of months, which is unusual for me as I tend to whip my way through novels. However, this is a novel that deserves time and contemplation as there are so many layers of meaning and so much to stop and appreciate like a beautiful work of art that seems to deliver something new on each re-examination and on each new page. I may still prefer ‘Cloud Atlas’ with its stronger narrative drive and more distinct characterisation and generic mix, but this is a very close second and utterly wonderful in its own right.
It demands an attentive reader who must act as a kind of detective recognising the ways in which the stories (although seemingly entirely disparate) are actually subtly connected through imagery and narrative echoes. Yet this is not merely an intellectual exercise, there is such aesthetic beauty and poetry to Mitchell’s writing that demands the reader savour every word, every symbol, every nuance of his language – it announces itself as a work of art and Mitchell as a stunning writing.
What is also amazing is Mitchell’s ability to write in so many different voices. He is able to capture the banter of Bat Segundo – the late night radio chat show host with all his clichéd one liners and personal middle aged angst at the same time as Quasar, a Japanese cult member mentally meandering through the landscape of his mind. No voice is the same and his writing seems to have the ability to embody his characters (whether human or not) and make them entirely distinct. The scale of this novel is also epic. Much like ‘Cloud Atlas’ for which this seems to be the forerunner (Louisa Del Rey even makes a brief appearance for example and there are other recognisable connections), Mitchell covers a vast array of landscapes. He takes us on a journey from Japan, where he is able to capture the chaos of the stifling commuters jostling for space and the magic of the rural mountainscape and then to an art gallery in Russia followed swiftly by the disparate boroughs of London that were made at once familiar and yet entirely new as he forces us to see the worlds he creates with new eyes. Moreover, he seems to know each intimately and paint these worlds for the reader in a way that is at once both beautiful and often painfully realistic.
Yet at the heart of all this is a spiritual or moral dilemma about our ability to create our own worlds and stories and to what extent we are truly in control of our destiny and to what extent we are responsible for the destiny of others or indeed our planet. "The world is made of stories, not people. The people the stories use to tell themselves are not to be blamed."
I don’t want to write too much about this novel because it is so complex, it cannot really be defined by a review and I also feel my own words ultimately fall short in comparison to Mitchell’s creative genius. This is a novel that is inventive, unique, intellectual, philosophical and at heart, deeply beautiful and emotionally engaging. It took me a long time to read – a period of months, which is unusual for me as I tend to whip my way through novels. However, this is a novel that deserves time and contemplation as there are so many layers of meaning and so much to stop and appreciate like a beautiful work of art that seems to deliver something new on each re-examination and on each new page. I may still prefer ‘Cloud Atlas’ with its stronger narrative drive and more distinct characterisation and generic mix, but this is a very close second and utterly wonderful in its own right.
cody240fc's review against another edition
4.0
I'm kicking myself for not jumping on the Mitchell bandwagon sooner. I loved the focus on interconnectedness and the debate of fate vs. free will. "We're all ghostwritters, my boy. And it's not just our memories. Our actions, too. We all think we're in control of our own lives, but really they're pre-ghostwritten by forces around us." And this: "The human world is made of stories, not people. The people the stories use to tell themselves are not to be blamed."
Mitchell utilizes a wide array of characters for each of the stories within this novel, and it was cool to see how he tied all of those unique stories together. Characters re-emerge several stories later, or there are subtle hints at the connectedness between different stories. It became a game of sorts to jot down notes on how this story related to that story and piece together the web that makes 'Ghostwritten' a unified novel. I also appreciated the diverse lenses with which individuals view the world. No characters share the exact same mindset, which I think a lot of authors will tell you is harder to accomplish than one might think.
This is a wholly original work. Mitchell's prose is clean but the story is complex. The language is diverse and the tones for one chapter can differ greatly from the next. The Night Train chapter is funny and terrifying at the same time. The Mongolia story is creepy and uplifting. It's just a lot of fun to read. Four to five star range, I'll go with a high four for now.
Mitchell utilizes a wide array of characters for each of the stories within this novel, and it was cool to see how he tied all of those unique stories together. Characters re-emerge several stories later, or there are subtle hints at the connectedness between different stories. It became a game of sorts to jot down notes on how this story related to that story and piece together the web that makes 'Ghostwritten' a unified novel. I also appreciated the diverse lenses with which individuals view the world. No characters share the exact same mindset, which I think a lot of authors will tell you is harder to accomplish than one might think.
This is a wholly original work. Mitchell's prose is clean but the story is complex. The language is diverse and the tones for one chapter can differ greatly from the next. The Night Train chapter is funny and terrifying at the same time. The Mongolia story is creepy and uplifting. It's just a lot of fun to read. Four to five star range, I'll go with a high four for now.
thameslink's review
4.0
Thought this one was ace- not quite bone clocks but would rank at 2 on the Mitchell scale so far.
It’s a blueprint for what comes after.
It’s a blueprint for what comes after.
pauloleary's review against another edition
adventurous
mysterious
reflective
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.25