David Mitchell's (not that one) The Bone Clocks has some similarities to his
most famous book Cloud Atlas, although it's got a more linear structure than
the Russian doll format of that novel, and its story takes place over a single
lifetime: That of Holly Sykes, who narrates the first segment as a teenager in the
1980s, and the final one as a grandmother in the 2040s. In between we have multiple
other narrators, all of whom have some connection to Holly, whether it be a
significant one or fleeting.
As well as following a human life from a distance, The Bone Clocks also has a
supernatural element that reveals itself more and more as the story goes on: Holly
is caught in the middle of a centuries-old war between two species of immortals, one
group nicknamed Carnivores, who kill to maintain their own eternal youth, and the
other calling themselves Horologists, who are eternally reincarnated while
remembering all their previous lives, and who are determined to wipe out the
murderous Carnivores.
It may have taken me a while but this was probably my favourite Mitchell book since
Cloud Atlas, and it also seems to take place in the same universe as all his
other books, including his dire warnings about a post-industrial future (assuming
the penultimate Cloud Atlas segment in a high-tech future could have been
taking place only in China, while the rest of the world succumbed to the events of
The Bone Clocks.) I think strict literary fiction fans might be a bit
nonplussed at how the gentle suggestions of the supernatural turn into full-on
fantasy for the 2020s part of the story, but for me the personal stories were
interesting (even when some of the narrators are far from sympathetic) and the
fantasy element effectively blended into the more naturalistic framework.
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