Tournament of Books discussion

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Cloud Atlas
2020 Super-Rooster Books
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Cloud Atlas
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Amy
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Apr 01, 2019 04:08PM

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I don't think I could have done it justice with audio...I remember going back and forth in my book to really try to tease out the interweaving of storylines. I'm especially excited about re-reading this one, because I think it's the kind of book that expands and deepens the more times you delve into it. (I want to read Bone Clocks again too.)

Cloud Atlas is up there with my favourite books of all time. I still find something new every time I read it. Bone Clocks is great as well, and I like how Slade House ties in with it. :)

I even watched the movie recently and had one of those "never as good as the book" comments. I might have to re-read it! It would be interesting, knowing what to expect, and more about what it "means" from the beginning.

I think it was always going to be a herculean task to fit a novel of that structure and magnitude into the format of a film. I think the brothers did their best, but I think it's almost an impossible task. I really hope Mitchell gifts us with another book soon.

I ended up getting the audiobook from my library to get through that central chapter with the bizarre proto-English. Read everything else. I think the audiobook was great in that case.
I think when I reread it I will try and just read through it all. I liked the book but I think it's my fourth favorite David Mitchell book. But I'm excited to go back to it after going through the others.

Did you like Slade House? I actually own it, but I never read it (which often happens with books I own since I feel like I have all the time in the world to read them...and then they get buried at the bottom of my Kindle shelf never to be seen again...) The plot summary didn't grab me, but I think it might be fun to read all three together.

hahahaha
This is my prediction for winner! (maybe?)
Thanks, Amy, for the threads!

Slade House was a little bit underwhelming, but I did enjoy it. It's been so long since I read it that I may have to read it again. I think it's a great idea about reading them together. I should have reread The Bone Clocks before reading Slade House. Yes, I think I might do that, thanks Elizabeth. :)


That makes sense - thanks for the input!

Yes, yes!!!! It was like being dropped into the middle of a foreign world and being carried along through incredible adventures. I adored that book.

Oh dear! It is wondrous to me. Truly.

I think I come somewhere in between the two of you. I remember really liking his family's story in the Dominican Republic, but being turned off and bored by Oscar's story in NJ. And I remember the language bugging me...I'm not a prude, so if it bothered me it must have been extreme. I think maybe it suffered from what I'm now going to think of as the There, There issue...so hyped it was bound not to live up to expectations.

So, true confession: I only read "Oscar Wao" two years ago, long after the hype had died down. That might have aided its cause, because it utterly wowed me, and not because it was an "It Book", but because I thought it was brilliant.


This note cracked me up. I was trying to decide if I should read this, Jo. Now I think I'll have to, though I'd like to decide what parts of my DNA I'd like changed.

Maybe I should read it again Risa. After all, it's sitting on my shelf. I didn't realize it was a winner.
It's strange to me how a book affects me deeply depending on where I am in my life. What my headspace is. What my life situation is. It would probably be worthwhile to make sure I've read all of these winners. There are about three I never got to, Cloud Atlas being one I own but haven't read.

I know I've told this story elsewhere, but it still makes me giggle -- I once abandoned a truly horrible dinner in a restaurant with a total boor/bore because I heard a woman at a nearby table enthusiastically describing the book she was reading to her companion, and it was clearly Cloud Atlas. I got up, ostensibly to go to the bathroom -- and inserted myself into their table and conversation. The woman greeted me as if I were her long lost best friend -- "oh, my god, someone else who's read this book! Isn't it AMAZING?"

Then I go about trying to figure out the order in which to read his books and I get completely discombobulated. I ask people, and everyone has a different preference! I might make this a summer project of mine. I'm really working hard this year to read a lot of backlist.


One of my IRL friends, we refer to each other as "fiction soulmates". If I love a fiction book, she'll love it too and vice versa. She's been all over me to read his whole collection, she said it's all 100% my wheelhouse, so I really do want to read all of them.



I think with these books you can't truly appreciate their genius if you read them lightly, you have to look closely at the interconnectedness of all things/people/ideas. You're going to have a fun summer!

It's really quite a feat to write so convincingly in multiple genres and then pull the threads together. I think the people who made the movie focused on the wrong things (but movies are always different stories from their book origins) however casting Jim Broadbent as Cavendish was a truly excellent part. The author said that even for him, now that he's seen the movie, he sees the characters as those actors (which is horrifying considering some of the really bad makeup jobs!!)
Meeting the author a few years ago was also an amazing moment. He is so NICE. I had stood in line for an hour, back with my friend who had two bags of books. Between the reading and the signing line I had been listening to David Mitchell's lovely English accent for two hours and since I pick up on accents easily (completely on accident, I swear), when I said hello he asked me if I was English and I was mortified. HA.
Anyway, I'm hoping the tournament of winners was not just a huge April Fools joke after oversharing about one of my favorite books. I was heartbroken when it didn't even make the Booker shortlist; I'm immune to it not advancing in the ToB. Nothing can sway my love.

For those of you new to Mitchell, he writes all novels as part of an uber universe, so all of them connect in some way. But all are also standalones. You will get more out of Slade House if you've read The Bone Clocks, but it isn't necessary.
Here is an article which explains it pretty well, with bonus photographs of the author! It may contain spoilers in small ways for his work as a whole.







I loved it. Read it a while ago, after reading Cloud Atlas. I don't remember it in much detail, but I do remember thinking that it showed the promise that would flower in CA.

I'm in too Elizabeth. I almost never re-read (not enough time!) but I need to make an exception for my #1 favorite book :)

Then I go about trying to figure out the order in which..."
I've been having the same problem without much help from google. Pretty sure I'm going to just start in publication order, including rereading Bone Clocks, since I liked it more than I expected to.

sounds great!

I'm assuming the championship must be at some point after the 2020 TOB, maybe in the spring like they had last year's NF TOB, or in place of the summer. I'd be happy to do it at any time before then (excluding November to March, of course, maybe also excluding this June-August because of the summer TOB.) Thoughts?

I'm assuming the championship must be at some point after the 2020 TOB, mayb..."
I'm retiring June 14 so almost any time after that is good except Sept. 15-Oct. 1, when I will be out of the country. It's not like I couldn't catch up when I get back though.


I'm assuming the championship must be at some point..."
Welcome to the fabulous world of retirement, Drew! I've just celebrated my first year, and I still wake up with a little thrill every morning. Still don't have enough time to read as much as I'd like to though! There must be some theory in physics that explains that phenomenon.
I'm on board for any date to re-read. Maybe I'll celebrate by buying a hard cover to replace my old paperback.

Thanks Elizabeth! I haven't read it either, and I'd love to do it as a group read. Count me in!

Same! It's long been on my TBR list, and this will motivate me to move it up. Will you (Elizabeth) announce when you'd like the discussion to occur so that I can plan my read of CA (around the zillion other books on my TBR list) in time to participate? :-)

The summer TOB should be over by the end of August, so maybe it would make sense to begin reading and discussing after that? Make Sept. 1 the start date? (I'm completely open to pushing it forward or back, though.) I forget how long each section is, but maybe we could read and discuss 1-2 sections at a time.
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