David MitchellBritish author David Mitchell at the Frankfurt Book Fair October 10, 2007. ©Torsten Silz—DDP/AFP/Getty Images(more)Cloud Atlas, novel by David Mitchell, published in 2004.
Cloud Atlas is a polyphonic compendium of interlacing but nonlinear parables. Divided into six different accounts spanning several centuries, Mitchell ranges from the journal of a 19th-century American notary to the post-apocalyptic memoir of a herdsman, Zachry. Each testament breaches time and space. Thus, in the second story, the financially destitute musician Robert Frobisher happens upon the explorer’s journal and includes it in a letter to his lover Rufus Sixsmith; in the third story, Sixsmith is a scientific advisor blowing the whistle on a nuclear conglomerate’s reactor; the report of the young journalist accompanying him then enters the custody of Timothy Cavendish, a publisher fleeing his underworld creditors. As Cavendish hides in a nursing home, Mitchell propels his reader into the future, where we encounter the plangent last testament of genetic fabricant Somni-451, detailing for the archives her life as an automaton under state control prior to execution. After visiting a postapocalyptic era nearly 500 years later than the novel’s beginning, in which humans have returned to a Neolithic way of life—yielding a rather bleak view of human progress, with civilisation having come to an end because of our “hunger for more”—the narrative then moves backward in time, with most of the preceding parts at least somewhat resolved: Mitchell’s main conclusion would seem to be that we destroy and can be destroyed by our desires, but also be redeemed by love.
Britannica Quiz Famous Novels, Last Lines Quiz Mitchell has recalled that "lurking in Cloud Atlas’ primordial soup was an idea for a novel with a Russian-doll structure" that would allow him to house multiple narratives within each other. He notes that Italo Calvino accumulated 12 plot layers with this device, yet "never ’came back’ to recontinue his interruptions." Mitchell makes the return journey, allowing Cloud Atlas to "boomerang back through the sequence." The novel’s language is equally dynamic, with the use of contrasting dialects and different literary styles.
Cloud Atlas was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, though it received mixed reviews on publication. Esteem for the book has grown since. A film version, starring Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, and Hugh Grant, was released in 2012, with a screenplay for which Mitchell received lead credit. A 20th-anniversary edition of the novel was released in 2024.