Andrew Smith's Reviews > Cloud Atlas
Cloud Atlas
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Some have claimed this to be a masterwork. Others say it’s unreadable. For my part, I have more sympathy with the latter view. Before reading the book, I deliberately hadn’t read any reader reviews, but I had seen the film trailer that seemed to promise a helter skelter race through the ages with the hint of reincarnation and sci-fi shootouts abounding. Well, disappointingly, that's not quite what I found between its pages.
I don’t mind having to do some thinking when I’m reading and, as a fan of Haruki Murakami’s books, I’m willing to suspend belief and go with the flow, even when I’m not sure where it’s going � or later, where it is I’ve arrived. My problem with this book was that I just didn’t enjoy the journey, or rather, I didn’t enjoy most of the journey.
Of the six stories � all told in a different style and each tale using a vocabulary of its own � I only really warmed to the account of the British composer evading creditors in 1930’s Belgium. I found all of the others a bit of a struggle. It is very clever in the way the stories interrupt each other and flow chronologically to halfway and are then completed in the second half of the book in reverse order. And they all are fully completed, with common references popping up and an overall picture forming� if you’ve managed to stay with it long enough. But was it worth the effort? And that's where it fails for me - my answer is no, not really.
I’m pretty sure I’m not really clever enough to have fully appreciated this complex offering. I also believe a second reading would (if I could face it) increase my appreciation of the book and allow me to draw out elements I’ve missed. But I’ve subsequently read in-depth reviews from people far more erudite than me, and I’ve yet to glean much more than I had already managed to absorb.
Readers will clearly have their own reaction to this book, and some will take more from it than others. I didn’t take very much, but I’m sure others will have a very different experience. Good luck to them, I’m filing this on my ‘too fanciful by far� shelf.
I don’t mind having to do some thinking when I’m reading and, as a fan of Haruki Murakami’s books, I’m willing to suspend belief and go with the flow, even when I’m not sure where it’s going � or later, where it is I’ve arrived. My problem with this book was that I just didn’t enjoy the journey, or rather, I didn’t enjoy most of the journey.
Of the six stories � all told in a different style and each tale using a vocabulary of its own � I only really warmed to the account of the British composer evading creditors in 1930’s Belgium. I found all of the others a bit of a struggle. It is very clever in the way the stories interrupt each other and flow chronologically to halfway and are then completed in the second half of the book in reverse order. And they all are fully completed, with common references popping up and an overall picture forming� if you’ve managed to stay with it long enough. But was it worth the effort? And that's where it fails for me - my answer is no, not really.
I’m pretty sure I’m not really clever enough to have fully appreciated this complex offering. I also believe a second reading would (if I could face it) increase my appreciation of the book and allow me to draw out elements I’ve missed. But I’ve subsequently read in-depth reviews from people far more erudite than me, and I’ve yet to glean much more than I had already managed to absorb.
Readers will clearly have their own reaction to this book, and some will take more from it than others. I didn’t take very much, but I’m sure others will have a very different experience. Good luck to them, I’m filing this on my ‘too fanciful by far� shelf.
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Reading Progress
August 28, 2013
– Shelved as:
to-read
August 28, 2013
– Shelved
November 10, 2014
–
Started Reading
November 20, 2014
–
Finished Reading
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Emma
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Sep 13, 2015 11:33AM

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His stories 'sound' so good in the blurbs... but this experience has put me off trying another.


At first I thought I'd missed something in this book, but now I think that maybe it just wasn't there.


Your thoughts are a comfort to me too - I felt a bit if a dunce for not appreciating this one, until I realised I wasn't alone.


Gosh, me too, Andrew!!!

Yes, I'm sure you're right - it's just that this book made me feel stupid.







