Monday, Oct 29, 2012 12:00 AM UTC
Everything you need to know about “Cloud Atlas”
Who's who? What's the timeline? And what's that song? All the answers about 2012's weirdest -- and coolest -- film
Who's who? What's the timeline? And what's that song? All the answers about 2012's weirdest -- and coolest -- film
Pick of the week: Tom Hanks and Halle Berry play multiple roles in an epic fable of life and death
The new film by the Wachowski siblings is due out in October VIDEO
The author of "Cloud Atlas" presents an ingenious adventure story set in 19th-century Japan
David Mitchell's follow-up to "Cloud Atlas" is a dark, intimate novel that remembers teenage humiliation -- and Thatcherite Britain.
Exotic Labor Day destinations: David Mitchell's post-apocalyptic "Cloud Atlas," Arthur Phillips' addictive saga of Egyptology, Michelle de Kretser's tale of murder in Ceylon, Patrick McGrath's yarn of debauchery in the tropics, and John Searles' unputdownable thriller.
From 19th century seafaring yarn to nuclear-power muckraking to a cloned servant in the cyberpunk future, this dazzling series of interlocked narratives is one of the summer's biggest books.
Nine stories and lives from across the globe intertwine in David Mitchell's debut novel, "Ghostwritten."
The latest, much-hyped attempt at a wild, supercharged fictional ride proves that minimalism may finally be dead, but true eccentric geniuses are few and far between.