The Bone Clocks
By David Mitchell
The latest novel from the author of Cloud Atlas, The Bone Clocks is divided
into six sections with very different voices. It covers the period 1984 to
2043, and blends genres beautifully, with a little bit of horror and science
fiction, into a literary masterpiece.
It is 1984 and Holly Sykes is a typical fifteen-year-old
British teenager, positive she is wildly in love with her boyfriend, Vinny, who
is twenty-four. “I fling open my bedroom curtains, and there’s the thirsty sky
and the wide river full of ships and boats and stuff, but I’m already thinking
of Vinny’s chocolaty eyes, shampoo down Vinny’s back, beads of sweat on Vinny’s
shoulders, and Vinny’s sly laugh, and by now my heart’s going mental and, God,
I wish I was waking up at Vinny’s place in Peacock Street and not in my own
stupid bedroom.”
Her mother finds out about it and goes ballistic.
Holly decides to leave home and go live with Vinny but ends up looking for an
abandoned building where she can camp out for a bit. She’s about to find more
adventure than she bargains for because there’s one particular thing that is
different about Holly, she used to hear voices. She called them “Radio People,”
which she means she has a gift that some very nasty people, called Anchorites,
would like to use her for.
The second part comes from the perspective of a young
man at Kings College, Hugo Lamb. Hugo seems to be rather amoral, or even
psychopathic. It is somewhat surprising the lengths he’ll go to in accumulating
a hefty bank account, most of them not legal, and definitely detrimental to
those around him. Eventually, he crosses paths with a slightly older Holly
Sykes in 1991 and things get even more interesting.
The next section is told from the perspective of Ed Brubeck
in 2004, now a journalist who reports mainly from war torn Iraq and is home
visiting Holly and their daughter Aoife. Could he be addicted to the action?
There’s definitely something he isn’t telling Holly, and they’re about to deal
with one of a parent’s worst fears.
In 2015, best-selling author Crispin Hershey is not so
best-selling anymore when he meets Holly, who is now a best-selling author. Their paths converge and then diverge
again for a while before coming back together. They become fast friends and
support each other through some difficult times.
Through the first four books runs the vein of a sort
of Time Lord, called the Horologists, and their fight against the predatory
Anchorites. In 2025, we finally meet an Horologist from their view point, one
who has lived many, many lives – the name is Marinus. The Horologists have a
plan to defeat the anchorites. It’s a long term plan. It may also be something
of a long shot. It also involves Holly Sykes.
Finally, we return to the viewpoint of a much older
Holly Sykes, in 2043 on Sheep’s Head in Ireland during a time period referred
to as the Endarkenment, after the environment is beyond broken and society has
broken down too, and it’s only getting worse. Is there any hope to be had?