David Mitchell spent years teaching English in Japan, and Tokyo provides the backdrop to his second novel, number9dream, which was shortlisted for the 2001 Man Booker Prize. iStock
David Mitchell spent years teaching English in Japan, and Tokyo provides the backdrop to his second novel, number9dream, which was shortlisted for the 2001 Man Booker Prize. iStock

Time and again: the critically acclaimed novelist David Mitchell on life, death and everything in between



It's not every day that an internationally bestselling novelist serenades you in song, but then David Mitchell [his Amazon.com page; his Amazon.co.uk page], author of Cloud Atlas, Black Swan Green and The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, is not every international bestselling novelist.

We have only just begun discussing his stupendous, challenging new novel The Bone Clocks, when he asks, a little mysteriously: "Have you noticed that all the great pieces of music have a navel? They have one little section or bridge or bit – I wouldn't use any more technical language than 'bit' – that's unexpected, but makes total sense afterwards. If it wasn't there it would still be a decent piece of work, but it just wouldn't have that thing that makes you want to live with it and keep listening to it as you age."

Mitchell gives examples of his manifesto for musical immortality. “A little, slow, soft undercutting in a piano piece by Shostakovich. Or it may be little more than a Tom Petty-type Uh-huh. No one else would have done it, but it just makes a song perfect.”

For Mitchell today, it is the chorus – "a place beyond language" – of Memories Can't Wait from Talking Heads' Fear of Music [Amazon.com; Amazon.co.uk]. Or: "Some mem-or-RIIIies can't WAII-aitttt" as Mitchell howls it. The rendition is charming and ever so slightly alarming. You suspect he would be a fun and enthusiastic addition to karaoke, but you are secretly glad he hasn't given up the day job.

Music clearly looms large over Mitchell's imagination. In a previous interview with me, he compared his magpie creativity – mixing and matching genres, tones and voices – to the eclectic BBC Radio 3 programme Late Junction, which plays Delta blues one moment, Pink Floyd the next and Messiaen for afters. More recently, his passion found expression in collaboration with Mitchell's childhood hero, Kate Bush: he co-wrote one dialogue and two monologues for her 22 sold-out nights at the Hammersmith Apollo in London. Bush, who was a fan of the author, contacted him after he wrote a newspaper article in praise of her work. "I was a very small cog in Kate's glorious machine," he has said. "I am a very lucky man. She is an artistic hero, as she is for very many right-minded people."

The reason for Mitchell's impromptu warble is the way Fear of Music resounds throughout The Bone Clocks. The album's themes – love, war, nature, memory and above all time – sing in harmony with Mitchell's novel, something his own mini-review catches. "It is one heck of an album. It sounds better now than it did then. It has this reverse-ageing production. It's a sort of immortal record. In a book full of pseudo-immortals that is no bad thing."

The album is present at the book’s opening in 1984. Our heroine, a teenager called Holly Sykes, runs away from home. This begins the “parabola of a life” that extends over six intricately interwoven novellas, 69 years and several countries, comprising all the grand narratives: loss, grief, conflict, marriage, children, art and the end of the world as we know it. Oh, and there is also a supernatural battle between two bands of semi-immortals fighting over time itself. “It is a big, hairy, bonkers, beast of a book,” Mitchell says. “My head is kind of spinning.”

Something similar happens to my head while talking to Mitchell himself. Open and friendly, he seems to regard an interview as an opportunity to whizz through ideas rather than as a process to be wary of. He is unfazed by personal questions, although he proves adept at deflecting them back towards his interrogator. When he learns I have a newborn daughter, he offers some paternal advice as the father of a daughter, age 12, and an 8-year-old son, whose autism Mitchell wrote movingly about in The Reason I Jump [Amazon.com; Amazon.co.uk], a book by 13-year-old Naoki Higashid that he translated with his wife Keiko.

“Enjoy ’em, relish ’em,” Mitchell tells me. “If you have the choice between working or playing on the trampoline, go out and play. You think you’ve made them – you haven’t. They are just on loan. They are with you for a short, middle section of your life. You think these yawning years of poo, nappies and sleeplessness will go on. Before you know it, they’re over. So, the trampoline, my friend, every time.”

What is striking about Mitchell’s conversation is how similar it is to the effervescent, free-range, culturally absorbent prose of his books. His eloquence, which is very occasionally impeded by traces of a childhood stammer, constantly runneth over. There are quotes, allusions, anecdotes and a belief that three words are not only better than one, they are necessary to say exactly what he wants.

“Being a writer is about amplifying or utilising or sprinkling phosphates or fertiliser over the imaginative processes that make worlds that aren’t and spending time with people who don’t actually exist. It is what writing is all about, especially if it is going to be any good.”

Both Mitchell and his fictions dash between high and low art without breaking stride. Early works like Ghostwritten and number9dream exhibit the influence of his eight years spent teaching English in Japan – their narratives are shaped by Haruki Murakami, but also anime and manga. His masterpiece, Cloud Atlas, glides from convincing 19th-century pastiche in the Pacific via American pulp thrillers to science fiction in Korea. In conversation today, Mitchell starts with Talking Heads, Shostakovich and Tom Petty, before name-checking Thomas Mann, Hari Kunzru, cheese-pop band Aqua, Game of Thrones and Star Trek's Jean-Luc Picard. He illustrates his belief that fiction is an "inexact" art form through a metaphor involving Pac-Man.

“I view the division between highbrow, middlebrow and lowbrow as an artificial division imposed by snobbery and inverted snobbery. It doesn’t matter if it’s highbrow or lowbrow, high art or low art. What matters is whether it is any good or not.”

In The Bone Clocks, Mitchell pastiches contemporary giants like Martin Amis, quotes Percy Bysshe Shelley, but also employs narrative forms drawn from Dungeons & Dragons and fuses social realism with fantasy. Mitchell admits these hybrid concoctions can be strange and even unstable. "I balance them on a wing and a prayer. It is a hazardous thing to do. The risk is that if I have all this stuff that is not so – circles of semi-immortals fighting in this Chapel of the Dusk between life and death – then how can I ask people to take seriously what I want to say about the occupation of Iraq in the same book?"

Mitchell’s answer suggests ways that all art forms mix the mundane and the incredible, just as all lives combine the material with the fantastic. Underlying each extreme is Mitchell’s theory of time’s relativity. “The fantasy section is the distillation of the idea that time passes strangely depending on our experiences. The idea that time goes at different speeds all at once is already extraordinary.”

In its more recognisably realist mode, The Bone Clocks surveys the past 40 years of world history – from the monetarist, Thatcherite 1980s in Britain via the virtual reality aspirations of the 1990s to the economically doomed, war-torn present. "As well as a parabola of a life, I also wanted a snapshot of the world from a British perspective, albeit through different lenses in terms of gender and class."

One of the most striking novellas – “The Wedding Bash”, set in 2004 – is narrated by Holly’s husband Ed, a war correspondent in Baghdad who faces one of many stark choices that Mitchell throws at his characters’ feet. Asked by his wife to leave the dangers of Iraq, he must either lose the job that gives his life meaning or the family whose nerves have been shredded by worry.

For Mitchell, Britain’s involvement in Iraq will define an entire era. “In future history books, this period of British history will be the central event from which all the other things unravel. It was hubris to get involved. It was an ignorant move. It wrecked the reputation of a previously pretty popular prime minister. It was the rock against which Tony Blair’s New Labour foundered. The reputational damage to the government was insurmountable as was the damage to Britain in the world.”

Mitchell cites Britain’s tattered reputation as the defender of political fair play. “That was trashed by Iraq. Its endgame was, I believe, politically and militarily mortifying. I am not clever enough or analytical enough on the Middle East to make the connections between ISIL and the Iraq war but they are there. They heighten and do not lessen the culpability of what we like to call a Coalition of the ­Willing.”

Read in the weeks following the brutal murders of British and American hostages by Islamist extremists, Ed's quandary is timely indeed. Noticeably, The Bone Clocks contains more than one portrait of a writer in crisis. But whereas Ed cannot escape reality's grip on his imagination, others – most obviously the ageing English novelist Crispin Hershey – are sliding inexorably in the other direction towards a life of near-illusion.

These characters recur often enough for me to ask whether Mitchell has similar misgivings about his chosen career. “In some ways [writing] does insulate or disconnect you. However, writers and poets play this up when they are young, often to get laid – to make them appear more extraterrestrial, otherworldly, vulnerable and remarkable than they actually are. They are just word nerds, and let’s not forget that.”

A more sincere and straightforward response is that Mitchell loves his job. “It’s profoundly fulfilling when writing goes well. You sometimes meet writers at festivals who go: ‘Poor me. No one understands how hard my job is.’ I just want to hit them. If you are a writer and make a living out of this, you are bloody lucky. If you think this is hard, try being a slave on a Thai prawn-fishing boat or in a Bangladesh textile factory or a Nepalese stadium builder in Qatar. We have nothing to complain about compared to that.”

One could argue, however, that Mitchell has had some cause for complaint in recent weeks. The Bone Clocks was longlisted for the prestigious Man Booker Prize, but failed to make the shortlist – the lucky winner will be announced next week. And one wonders whether his send-up of literary competition in the form of the Brittan Prize played a part in its rejection. Mitchell himself was a vocal supporter of the much-trumpeted alternative to the Man Booker, The Folio Prize. Mitchell proves typically gracious about the competition. "The Man Booker was very generous to me in my early career," he says, referring to number9dream and Cloud Atlas, which both made the shortlist. "It owes me nothing."

He is similarly careful, albeit in light-hearted fashion, when I hypothesise that the bibulous, out-of-touch Crispin Hershey is a dead ringer for Martin Amis. “Not going there, mate. Not with specific names,” Mitchell says, a touch naughtily. “It’s more me. It’s the aspects of me that are less praiseworthy and would run amok without a stable family and a well-grounded wife who knew me before I became a writer.”

I try another plot involving the puffed-up but genial Crispin. Upon discovering that an old friend has trashed his latest novel, he revenges himself by planting cocaine in the reviewer's suitcase at a Colombian literary festival. The critic winds up in a terrifying prison. I spoke to Mitchell before The Bone Clocks began receiving its usual glowing notices, sprinkled with the odd unflattering assessment: see James Wood's sceptical piece in The New Yorker. Has he ever wanted to wreak revenge on a nasty critic?

“I have been tempted to smuggle cocaine into certain suitcases and then alert the authorities,” he replies, a little mischievously. “Of course I never would, my dear boy.” The real answer is that Mitchell no longer reads reviews. “The good ones and the bad ones are wasps at the picnic of a calm mind. You need a calm mind to work. But my editor knows that any email which accidentally contains encouraging phrases will not be deleted before they are read.”

Mitchell really does mean that about good reviews, arguing that praise can be as “corrosive” to the creative process as censure. “The good ones appeal to parts of me that I am not proud of. I am egotistical enough, believe it or not. You shouldn’t be thinking where you are in the pantheon, or where you are compared to your contemporaries. If you give that any credence, when the wind changes direction your self-esteem is disembowelled. You can’t accept the praise without rendering yourself dangerously vulnerable to negative criticism. The biggest question should be, How do I make this damn book work?”

Mitchell is now 45, and his immediate literary reputation seems assured. There has been the odd hiccup: the movie adaptation of Cloud Atlas was widely disliked, but that is hardly his fault. While he is characteristically kind about the film, he doesn't always sound as secure about his own future.

His unease is partly global in nature. The Bone Clocks ends with Holly living in Ireland (not far from her creator's home in Clonakilty) and facing what appears to be an environmental apocalypse. How concerned is Mitchell that the end of the world is nigh – if not for him, then for his children? "I am pretty worried. Civilisations do collapse. Sometimes they collapse in slow motion. Others collapse almost overnight. You can't see it until the buildings have fallen on you."

But the sense that time is running out has personal dimensions as well. A central narrative pulse in The Bone Clocks is a Faustian pact offered to the ambitious, shallow Cambridge student, Hugo Lamb, who must choose between love with Holly Sykes and eternal life. "What would you do if you had the choice between this beautiful potential soulmate who could help you become a better, less selfish man, but you will eventually age and die? Or, if you amputate your conscience, you can become immune to mortality? You can keep your looks, your youth and your health indefinitely." Mitchell lets the question hang. "I think the honest answer is you wouldn't dismiss it out of hand. I know I wouldn't."

But, I prompt, unlike Hugo Lamb, Mitchell isn’t getting any younger. “Is it my midlife crisis novel you mean?” Mitchell laughs, before returning my serve and asking my own age. “You are old enough to know what I mean. Death is no longer a conceptual thing that is not going to happen, is it? You can feel mortality in your kneecaps, can’t you, and the shortness of your breath when you take the stairs rather than the escalator. You look in the mirror and see your father. Your ears grow larger as your head begins to shrink. If you look closely, the gums around your incisors are receding. That’s where we get the phrase long in the tooth.” Mitchell pauses. “My dentist told me that. He’s a few years younger than me, the b******.”

Mitchell says that the idea of art and art's immortality – whether Talking Heads' or his own – gives small, but significant comfort. "It is true in a non-mystical way that what Shakespeare thought did not die when he did. Wouldn't it be disingenuous to admit that that's a little bit attractive?" Mitchell himself has already published a new story, The Right Sort, albeit on Twitter, and has planned his next major book.

Ask if he thinks about death, and he sounds pleasingly unfazed. "We'd be crazy not to. It's right that we think about it and do what we can to prepare for it. I don't like this aspect of our culture that sees death as the taboo." He mentions reading The Tibetan Book of the Dead while writing The Bone Clocks. But it is another authority who boldly has the final word, and offers a slice of intergalactic carpe diem about life, death and time itself. "To quote Captain Jean-Luc Picard in one of the Star Trek films: Think of death as a constant companion rather than an enemy, a companion that walks on your shoulder through life and just whispers at your ear. Enjoy this. Relish this. It won't last forever."

James Kidd is a freelance reviewer based in London.

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Klopp at the Kop

Matches 68; Wins 35; Draws 19; Losses 14; Goals For 133; Goals Against 82

  • Eighth place in Premier League in 2015/16
  • Runners-up in Europa League in 2016
  • Runners-up in League Cup in 2016
  • Fourth place in Premier League in 2016/17
How green is the expo nursery?

Some 400,000 shrubs and 13,000 trees in the on-site nursery

An additional 450,000 shrubs and 4,000 trees to be delivered in the months leading up to the expo

Ghaf, date palm, acacia arabica, acacia tortilis, vitex or sage, techoma and the salvadora are just some heat tolerant native plants in the nursery

Approximately 340 species of shrubs and trees selected for diverse landscape

The nursery team works exclusively with organic fertilisers and pesticides

All shrubs and trees supplied by Dubai Municipality

Most sourced from farms, nurseries across the country

Plants and trees are re-potted when they arrive at nursery to give them room to grow

Some mature trees are in open areas or planted within the expo site

Green waste is recycled as compost

Treated sewage effluent supplied by Dubai Municipality is used to meet the majority of the nursery’s irrigation needs

Construction workforce peaked at 40,000 workers

About 65,000 people have signed up to volunteer

Main themes of expo is  ‘Connecting Minds, Creating the Future’ and three subthemes of opportunity, mobility and sustainability.

Expo 2020 Dubai to open in October 2020 and run for six months

A MINECRAFT MOVIE

Director: Jared Hess

Starring: Jack Black, Jennifer Coolidge, Jason Momoa

Rating: 3/5

Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

WHAT IS A BLACK HOLE?

1. Black holes are objects whose gravity is so strong not even light can escape their pull

2. They can be created when massive stars collapse under their own weight

3. Large black holes can also be formed when smaller ones collide and merge

4. The biggest black holes lurk at the centre of many galaxies, including our own

5. Astronomers believe that when the universe was very young, black holes affected how galaxies formed

About Takalam

Date started: early 2020

Founders: Khawla Hammad and Inas Abu Shashieh

Based: Abu Dhabi

Sector: HealthTech and wellness

Number of staff: 4

Funding to date: Bootstrapped

MATCH INFO

Uefa Champions League semi-final, first leg
Bayern Munich v Real Madrid

When: April 25, 10.45pm kick-off (UAE)
Where: Allianz Arena, Munich
Live: BeIN Sports HD
Second leg: May 1, Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid

The specs: 2019 Mercedes-Benz C200 Coupe


Price, base: Dh201,153
Engine: 2.0-litre turbocharged four-cylinder
Transmission: Nine-speed automatic
Power: 204hp @ 5,800rpm
Torque: 300Nm @ 1,600rpm
Fuel economy, combined: 6.7L / 100km

Results

5pm: Maiden (PA) Dh80,000 (Turf) 1,200m. Winner: Majd Al Megirat, Sam Hitchcott (jockey), Ahmed Al Shehhi (trainer)

5.30pm: Handicap (PA) Dh80,000 (T) 1,600m. Winner: Dassan Da, Patrick Cosgrave, Helal Al Alawi

6pm: Abu Dhabi Fillies Classic Prestige (PA) Dh110,000 (T) 1,400m. Winner: Heba Al Wathba, Richard Mullen, Jean de Roualle

6.30pm: Abu Dhabi Colts Classic Prestige (PA) Dh110,000 (T) 1,400m. Winner: Hameem, Adrie de Vries, Abdallah Al Hammadi

7pm: Wathba Stallions Cup Handicap (PA) Dh70,000 (T) 2,200m. Winner: Jawal Al Reef, Richard Mullen, Ahmed Al Mehairbi

Handicap (TB) Dh100,000 (T) 2,200m. Winner: Harbour Spirit, Adrie de Vries, Jaber Ramadhan.

2025 Fifa Club World Cup groups

Group A: Palmeiras, Porto, Al Ahly, Inter Miami.

Group B: Paris Saint-Germain, Atletico Madrid, Botafogo, Seattle.

Group C: Bayern Munich, Auckland City, Boca Juniors, Benfica.

Group D: Flamengo, ES Tunis, Chelsea, Leon.

Group E: River Plate, Urawa, Monterrey, Inter Milan.

Group F: Fluminense, Borussia Dortmund, Ulsan, Mamelodi Sundowns.

Group G: Manchester City, Wydad, Al Ain, Juventus.

Group H: Real Madrid, Al Hilal, Pachuca, Salzburg.

While you're here
The smuggler

Eldarir had arrived at JFK in January 2020 with three suitcases, containing goods he valued at $300, when he was directed to a search area.
Officers found 41 gold artefacts among the bags, including amulets from a funerary set which prepared the deceased for the afterlife.
Also found was a cartouche of a Ptolemaic king on a relief that was originally part of a royal building or temple. 
The largest single group of items found in Eldarir’s cases were 400 shabtis, or figurines.

Khouli conviction

Khouli smuggled items into the US by making false declarations to customs about the country of origin and value of the items.
According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, he provided “false provenances which stated that [two] Egyptian antiquities were part of a collection assembled by Khouli's father in Israel in the 1960s” when in fact “Khouli acquired the Egyptian antiquities from other dealers”.
He was sentenced to one year of probation, six months of home confinement and 200 hours of community service in 2012 after admitting buying and smuggling Egyptian antiquities, including coffins, funerary boats and limestone figures.

For sale

A number of other items said to come from the collection of Ezeldeen Taha Eldarir are currently or recently for sale.
Their provenance is described in near identical terms as the British Museum shabti: bought from Salahaddin Sirmali, "authenticated and appraised" by Hossen Rashed, then imported to the US in 1948.

- An Egyptian Mummy mask dating from 700BC-30BC, is on offer for £11,807 ($15,275) online by a seller in Mexico

- A coffin lid dating back to 664BC-332BC was offered for sale by a Colorado-based art dealer, with a starting price of $65,000

- A shabti that was on sale through a Chicago-based coin dealer, dating from 1567BC-1085BC, is up for $1,950