David Mitchell | |
Birth Name: | David Stephen Mitchell |
Birth Date: | 12 January 1969 |
Birth Place: | Southport, England |
Occupation: | Novelist, television writer, screenwriter |
Education: | University of Kent |
Period: | 1999–present |
Notableworks: | number9dream Cloud Atlas |
Spouse: | Keiko Yoshida |
Children: | 2 |
David Stephen Mitchell (born 12 January 1969) is an English novelist, television writer, and screenwriter.
He has written nine novels, two of which, number9dream (2001) and Cloud Atlas (2004), were shortlisted for the Booker Prize. He has also written articles for several newspapers, most notably for The Guardian. He has translated books about autism from Japanese to English.
Mitchell was born in Southport in Lancashire (now Merseyside), England, and raised in Malvern, Worcestershire. He was educated at Hanley Castle High School. At the University of Kent, he earned a degree in English and American Literature, followed by an M.A. in Comparative Literature.
Mitchell lived in Sicily for a year. He moved to Hiroshima, Japan, where he taught English to technical students for eight years, before returning to England. There he could live on his earnings as a writer and support his pregnant wife.
Mitchell's first novel, Ghostwritten (1999), takes place in locations ranging from Okinawa to Mongolia to pre-millennial New York City, as nine narrators tell stories that interlock and intersect. It won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (for best work of British literature written by an author under 35) and was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award.[1] His two subsequent novels, number9dream (2001) and Cloud Atlas (2004), were both favourably received and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize.[2]
In 2003, he was selected as one of Granta's Best of Young British Novelists.[3] In 2007, Mitchell was listed among Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in The World.[4]
In 2012, his metafictional novel Cloud Atlas (again, with multiple narrators), was adapted as a feature film of the same name.
One segment of number9dream was adapted as a short film titled The Voorman Problem and starring Martin Freeman. It was nominated for a BAFTA in 2013.[5]
In addition to novels, Mitchell has written opera libretti in recent years. Wake, with music by Klaas de Vries, was based on the 2000 Enschede fireworks disaster. It was performed by the Dutch Nationale Reisopera in 2010.[6] He created the opera, Sunken Garden, with Dutch composer Michel van der Aa; it was premiered in 2013 by the English National Opera.[7]
Several of Mitchell's book covers were created by design duo Kai and Sunny.[8] Mitchell has also collaborated with the duo, by contributing two short stories to their art exhibits in 2011 and 2014.
Mitchell's sixth novel, The Bone Clocks, was published in 2014.[9] In an interview in The Spectator, Mitchell said that the novel has "dollops of the fantastic in it", and is about "stuff between life and death".[10] The Bone Clocks was longlisted for the 2014 Man Booker Prize.[11]
Mitchell was the second author to contribute to the Future Library project. He delivered his book From Me Flows What You Call Time on 28 May 2016.[12] [13]
Utopia Avenue, Mitchell's ninth novel, was published by Hodder & Stoughton in 2020, during the first year of the Covid 19 pandemic.[14] Utopia Avenue tells the "unexpurgated story" of a British band of the same name, who emerged from London's psychedelic scene in 1967 and was "fronted by folk singer Elf Holloway, guitar demigod Jasper de Zoet and blues bassist Dean Moss".[15]
Mitchell's entire body of fictional works feature multiple recurring characters and themes that together form an interconnected fictional world, which Mitchell refers to as his 'macronovel'.[16]
Following the release of the 2012 film adaptation of Cloud Atlas, Mitchell began work as a screenwriter with Lana Wachowski (one of Cloud Atlas three directors). In 2015, Mitchell contributed plotting and scripted scenes for the second season of the Netflix series Sense8 by the Wachowskis. They had adapted the novel for a TV series, and together with Aleksandar Hemon, they wrote the series finale.[17] Mitchell had signed a contract to write season three of the series, but Netflix cancelled the show.[18]
In August 2019, it was announced that Mitchell would continue his collaboration with Lana Wachowski and Hemon to write the screenplay for The Matrix Resurrections.[19]
After another stint in Japan, Mitchell and his wife, Keiko Yoshida, live in Ardfield, County Cork, Ireland, . They have two children.[20] In an essay for Random House, Mitchell wrote:[21]
Mitchell has a stammer.[22] He believes that the film The King's Speech (2010) is one of the most accurate portrayals of that experience for an individual.[22] He said, "I'd probably still be avoiding the subject today had I not outed myself by writing a semi-autobiographical novel, Black Swan Green, narrated by a stammering 13-year-old."[22] Mitchell is a patron of the British Stammering Association.[23]
Mitchell's son is autistic. In 2013, Mitchell and his wife Yoshida translated a book into English that was written by Naoki Higashida, a 13-year-old Japanese autistic boy, titled .[24] Higashida is said to have learned to communicate using the techniques of facilitated communication and rapid prompting method.
In 2017, Mitchell and his wife translated a second book attributed to Higashida, Fall Down 7 Times Get Up 8: A Young Man's Voice from the Silence of Autism.[25]
Novels
Novellas
Short stories
Title | Publication | Notes |
---|---|---|
"Mongolia" | New Writing 8 (1999) | Incorporated into Ghostwritten |
"The January Man" | Granta 81 (Spring 2003) | Incorporated into Black Swan Green |
"What You Do Not Know You Want" | McSweeney's Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories, ed. Michael Chabon (2004) | - |
"Acknowledgments" | Prospect (October 2005) | Read online |
"Hangman" | New Writing 13 (2005) | Incorporated into Black Swan Green |
"Preface" | The Daily Telegraph (April 29, 2006) | - |
"Dénouement" | The Guardian (May 25, 2007) | Read online |
"Judith Castle" | The Book of Other People, ed. Zadie Smith (2007) | - |
"The Massive Rat" | The Guardian (July 31, 2009) | Read online |
"An Inside Job" | Fighting Words, ed. Roddy Doyle (2009) | - |
"Character Development" | Freedom: Short Stories Celebrating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (2009) | - |
"Muggins Here" | The Guardian (August 13, 2010) | Read online |
"Earth Calling Taylor" | Financial Times (December 30, 2010) | Read online |
"The Siphoners" | I'm With the Bears: Short Stories from a Damaged Planet (2011) | - |
"The Gardener" | Kai & Sunny exhibition The Flower Show (June 2011) | - |
"In the Bike Sheds" | We Love This Book (Summer 2011) | - |
"Lots of Bits of Star" | Kai & Sunny exhibition Caught by the Nest (September 2013) | - |
"Variations on a Theme by Mister Donut" | Granta 127 (Spring 2014) | - |
"The Right Sort" | Twitter (July 2014) | Incorporated into Slade House |
"My Eye on You" | Kai & Sunny exhibition Whirlwind of Time (March 2016) | - |
"All Souls Day" | Jealous Saboteurs, Francis Upritchard (2016) | Incorporated into Black Swan Green |
"A Forgettable Story" | Silkroad, Cathay Fiction Anthology (July 2017) | - |
"Repeats" | Freeman's 5 (October 2018) | - |
"If Wishes Was Horses" | The New York Times Magazine (July 12, 2020) | Read online |
"By Misadventure" | The European Review of Books (May 2021) | - |
"U-Turn If You Want To" | The Spectator (December 17, 2022) | Read online |
Opera librettos
Selected articles
Other