Review
'Compared with almost everything being written now, it is vertiginously ambitious - and brilliant...He can write as thrillingly about large-scale events as he can about the tiny details of the private world. Such fluent and masterful command of both domains seems the stuff of a true artist's gifts' (
The Times)
'Unquestionably a marvel - entirely original among contemporary British novels, revealing its author as, surely, the most impressive fictional mind of his generation' (
Observer)
'Mitchell gives us a world of stories in prose that brings a lump to the throat...dive in and lose yourself in a world of incredible scope, originality and imaginative brilliance. David Mitchell has done it again.' (
Independent on Sunday)
'Spectacularly accomplished and thrillingly suspenseful...it brims with rich, involving and affecting humanity.' (
Sunday Times)
'Arguably his finest...Every sentence yields glorious surprises that no one else could think up...It will doubtless earn Mitchell his fourth Man Booker nomination and, if there's any justice, his first win.' (
Sunday Telegraph)
'However densely charted and richly sketched, this sumptuous imbroglio never drags...Mitchell flexes his prose virtuosity. More than before, those muscles do the heart's work.' (Independent)
'Hugely enjoyable...the descriptions of Dejima and what life there must have been like are extraordinarily accurate' (Literary Review)
'David Mitchell is back with a bang...superb' (Irish Independent)
'For a tour de force, it's surprisingly nimble, emotionally complex and simply unforgettable.' (Scotland on Sunday)
'Ambitious and fascinating...Comparisons to Tolstoy are inevitable, and right on the money.'
(
Kirkus Reviews)
'A masterpiece' (
Scotsman)
"My favourite new novel of the year, by a very long way . . . People will still be marvelling at THE THOUSAND AUTUMNS OF JACOB DE ZOET decades after last year's award winners have been forgotten." (Gary Dalkin,
Vector, Books of the Year)
About the Author
David Mitchell's first novel, GHOSTWRITTEN, was awarded the
Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and was shortlisted for the
Guardian First Book Award. His second novel, NUMBER9DREAM, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. In 2003, David Mitchell was selected as one of
Granta's Best of Young British Novelists and his third novel, CLOUD ATLAS, was shortlisted for six awards including the Man Booker Prize and won the British Book Awards Best Literary Fiction and South Bank Show Literature Prize. His previous novel, BLACK SWAN GREEN, was shortlisted for the Costa Novel of the Year Award.