Janssen G
Janssen G
Janssen G
Gaby Janssen
Radboud University Nijmegen
BA Werkstuk Engelse Letterkunde
Supervisor: Sophie van Os
15 juni 2022
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Title of document: The Function of Metafiction in Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks
The work submitted here is the sole responsibility of the undersigned, who has neither
Signed
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Abstract
In this thesis I examine the literary merit of metafictional elements in David Mitchell’s novels
Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks. This thesis will answer the central question of what
metafictional elements can be found in these two novels and what their function is. Moreover,
the works are set a couple of years apart which allows this thesis to look at what metafictional
strategies David Mitchel re-employs. Metafictional texts always redirect the attention of the
reader to question the reality or fictionality of a story. I will argue that Mitchell uses
metafiction to draw attention to a second layer in his text which makes the reader aware of
the fact that they are reading a text and therefore question the reality of the story.
Keywords: David Mitchell, Ghostwritten, The Bone Clocks, Narrative structure, Metafiction.
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Table of Contents
Abstract ...........................................................................................................................2
Introduction .....................................................................................................................4
Chapter 1. Theoretical framework .....................................................................................9
Chapter 2. Reliablility of Ghostwritten ............................................................................14
Chapter 3. Creation of the novel The Bone Clocks ............................................................24
Conclusion ......................................................................................................................31
Works Cited ....................................................................................................................33
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Introduction
David Mitchell (1969) is a contemporary British writer. His first novel, Ghostwritten, was
published in 1999 and won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. His latest book, Utopia Avenue,
was published in 2020. In the meantime, he managed to get shortlisted for the Man Booker
Prize in 2001 for Number9dream, and in 2004 for Cloud Atlas. He secured a place on the
longlist with Black Swan Green (2006), The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (2010) and
The Bone Clocks (2014).1 In 2007, he was even named one of the 100 most influential people
Over the years Mitchell has become well known for his writing style. In an interview
with Kim Skotte, at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Mitchell talks about his
fascinations with words: “For me its words and their textures and nuances and the way they
do fit together or do not fit together concordantly or discordantly … I love all this stuff.”3
Mitchell also mentions that he does not define himself purely as a postmodern writer, as he
finds that postmodern books are often more ingenious than loved, and he wants the stories he
writes to be finished and fulfilling. 4 Mitchell has a way with words and is courageous in his
writing because he experiments with concepts that have not been tried by other authors,
In his books, which with the exeption of semi-autobiography Black Swan Green, are
all fictional, Mitchell plays with different genres, including historical fiction, science fiction,
fantasy, and magical realism, creating unique concepts. The intradimensional garden of Slade
1
“David Mitchell,” The Booker Prizes, accessed June 11, 2022, https://thebookerprizes.com/the-booker-
library/authors/david-mitchell.
2
“About David Mitchell,” David Mitchell, accessed June 11, 2022, https://www.davidmitchellbooks.com/about-
david-mitchell/.
3
Kim, Skotte. “David Mitchell Interview: Stories Have a Number of Beginnings.” Louisiana Channel, August
2014. https://youtu.be/SbLNRxw3tZ8
4
Skotte, “David Mitchell Interviews: Stories Have a Number of Beginnings.”
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Moreover, his stories are set across space and time: Cloud Atlas has both narratives in the
David Mitchell is skilled in writing novellas and therefore he is most known for his
ability of writing short stories that connect gradually over the course of a book, or even
multiple books. As Alex Clark has underlined, “Mitchell’s novels, from his
1999 debut Ghostwritten, through Cloud Atlas and Black Swan Green in the mid 2000s, and
2014’s semi-supernatural epic The Bone Clocks, are strongly preoccupied with the idea of
more like a heady brew of cosmic echo, historical recurrence, personal destiny and narrative
fillip.”5 Mitchell has created a world with returning characters across various books. He
refers to this as his “uber-novel” or “personal middle earth.”6 Though each book he writes
can be seen as a new chapter of this work, with returning characters that bring with them
histories and autobiographies, Mitchell ensures that each novel is also a standalone; they are
not prequels or sequels but accessible to people who have never read a word of his before. 7
A lot of academic interest in Mitchell’s work has been shown, especially in Cloud
Atlas, which has been his most popular work.8 Cloud Atlas has even been adapted into a
movie in 2012, and especially its theme of globalism has received a lot of critical attention by
scholars such as Mezey, who has highlighted Mitchell’s refiguration of community and
5
Alex Clark, David Mitchell: 'I think most writers have a deep-seated envy of musicians.' The Guardian.com,
July 3, 2020, https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/jul/03/david-mitchell-i-think-most-writers-have-a-deep-
seated-envy-of-musicians.
6
Mashable. “Discuss ‘The Bone clocks’with Author David Mitchell | Mashable” Youtube, Mashable, 37:50.
October 2, 2014. https://youtu.be/9Hw0oloUxnA
7
Alex Clark, David Mitchell.
8
Examples of studies into Cloud Atlas include: ‘Maria Beville, “Getting Past the ‘Post-’: History and Time in
the Fiction of David Mitchell,” [Sic] – a Journal of Literature, Culture and Literary Translation, no. 1.6
(January 2015), https://doi.org/10.15291/sic/1.6.lc.1.’ and ‘Alexander Beaumont, “Cosmopolitanism without a
World? David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas,” Open Library of Humanities4, no. 2 (2018),
https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.349.’
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storytelling.9 Themes such as cosmopolitism and post/meta-modernism have also been vastly
Cloud Atlas, and Bentley who explores postmodern and metamodern elements in Cloud
atlas.10 The reason why Mitchell’s novels have been studied in light of postmodernism and
metamodernism is because he often experiments with his narrative, making his texts very
self-aware.
Additionally, Mitchell’s novels are often layered. This can be seen in his first novel
Ghostwritten, where Mitchell uses disparate complex storylines that will be resolved in a later
chapter. In his novel The Bone Clocks, major and minor characters from Mitchell’s self-
designed universe come together. Mitchell has created textual worlds with characters that
cross various historical periods and geographical locations that offer a basis of postmodern
playfulness and ties these forms together. In recent years researchers have looked at the map
laid out by Mitchell, that spans over multiple novels.11 Characters and events distant from
each other are placed on a timeline and echo one another across generations. 12 Most of these
characters do not play a central part in the plot, however, they are present for the joy of the
reader and to slightly alter the scene. Not only does Mitchell create a labyrinth that connects
his multiple works, but his independent books are also set up in a way that narratives
While the way in which Mitchell’s novels are layered, as well as the use of language
in his novels, can thus be seen as elements of postmodernism or metamodernism, they can
9Jason Mezey. “A Multitude Of Drops’: Recursion And Globalization In David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas,” Modern
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also be classified as metafictional elements. In this study, I am therefore going to answer the
question: “How do metafictional elements function in David Mitchell’s Ghostwritten and The
Bone Clocks?” I will argue that David Mitchell uses metafictional elements to make the
reader question the truth of the story they are reading, because of unreliable narrators.
Moreover, I argue that Mitchell invites the reader into the process of creating a novel through
metafiction. And finally, the connections that Mitchell creates through re-appearing
characters within his various novels can be viewed as metafictional elements themselves.
Mitchell’s use of metafiction in Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks. I will be analyzing the
novels specifically on the use of structure, language and returning characters. By using close
readings as examples, I will examine in what ways metafiction is achieved and then
determine their effect on the novel and the reader. Metafictionality includes the use of
metatextuality and historiographic metafiction, this study will also contribute to the better
understanding these two concepts and their boundaries. If we look at Mitchell’s novels as
examples of metafictional texts, we can learn more about what metafiction entails and its
function. Furthermore, Mitchell’s books are often looked at separately. However, in the
process of creating his uber-novel, Mitchell’s novels have become connected. By comparing
the novels, it will become more apparent in what ways Mitchells writing style has changed
between David Mitchell’s debut novel and one of his later novels.
The first chapter will establish a theoretical framework for this thesis. I will define the
notions metatextuality and narrative to use as a basis for my close readings. In each of the
chapters that follow I zoom in on one of the novels. Chapter two will examine Ghostwritten
and argues that Mitchell uses metafictional elements to make the reader question the truth of
the story. In chapter three I discuss The Bone Clocks. In this chapter, I will examine what
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strategies from Mitchell’s debut novel are re-used and explore what new strategies have
appeared since. In the conclusion I bring these works together, comparing and contrasting the
different metafictional elements that are apparent in both these novels and stating their effect
on the reader. In the conclusion the function of these metafictional elements will be
highlighted.
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Because I will be analysing the two novels Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks according to
the notion of Metafiction, it is important to first understand the meaning of that concept.
Metafiction qualifies as a special kind of literary text that became characteristic of the
often be found in postmodern literature. Postmodern authors, in their novels, stories, and
poems, prefer to reject explicit meanings in favour of highlighting and celebrating the
work. They, essentially, write about writing in order to make the reader aware of its
functionality and, occasionally, the author's presence. This technique is used by authors to
allow for dramatic narrative shifts, implausible temporal jumps, or to distance themselves
Moving on to metafiction itself, The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms states that
Metafiction is: “Fiction about fiction; or more especially a kind of fiction that openly
comments on its own fictional status. The works need to have a significant degree of self-
consciousness.”16 For example, authors can interrupt their narrative to comment on their own
creation or offer insights. Patricia Waugh, in Metafiction: The Theory and Practice of Self-
conscious Fiction, writes that “Metafiction is a term given to fictional writing which self-
consciously and systematically draws attention to its status as an artefact in order to pose
14 Elvira Vatazhko, “The Concepts of ‘Metatextuality’ and ‘Metafiction’ in Literary Criticism,” Слово і Час,
no. 2 (2021): pp. 100-109, https://doi.org/10.33608/0236-1477.2021.02.100-109, 1.
15 Linda Hutcheon, A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction (New York: Routledge, 2010), 105.
16 “Metafiction,” The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms (4 ed.), accessed June 11, 2022, https://www-
oxfordreference-com.ru.idm.oclc.org/view/10.1093/acref/9780198715443.001.0001/acref-9780198715443-e-
709?rskey=vwvtrQ&result=720.
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questions about the relationship between fiction and reality.” 17 As has become apparent from
Waugh’s work, metafictional works often have multiple layers of meaning. At the surface
level, there is the text which appears as and conveys a story. However, under the surface
there is the second layer which makes you aware of the fact that you are reading a text. There
celebrating the power of creative imagination. The writing style and extremely self-conscious
use of language is used to break free of old forms and pose questions about the relationship
between fiction and reality. Building on Waugh’s influential study, Preeti Oza, additionally
defines Metafiction as “an indirect way of live storytelling. It provides a direct commentary
on the way a piece of art is created. It puts equal pressure of participation on the reader or the
audience to be a conscious part of the entire process of creation of that art.” 18 This suggests
that intentionally making the audience aware of the way in which a work of fiction is created
is essential for metafiction. The fictional work is highlighted when the reader gains insight in
how it was created. In order to do so, metafictive texts include strategies such as unreliable or
obtrusive narrators, intertextuality, genre mixing and multiple narrators, all of which can
argues that metatextuality can be seen as a sub concept of transtextuality; the textual
transcendence of the text. 20 Genette recognises five types of transtextual subconcepts in his
17 Patricia Waugh, Metafiction: The Theory and Practice of Self-Conscious Fiction (London: Routledge, Taylor
& Francis Group, 2015), 2.
18
Preeti Oza, “Explorations of Meta-Fictional Elements: Convergence of Narratives in Different
Genre,” Language, Literature and Beyond: The Postmodern Genre, August 20AD,
https://doi.org/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/343725062_Explorations_of_Meta-
Fictional_Elements_Convergence_of_Narratives_in_Different_Genre, 1.
19Amy Cross, “The (Im)Possibility of Objectivity: Narrating the Past in Young Adult Historiographic
Metafiction,” The ALAN Review 42, no. 3 (2015): pp. 12-21, https://doi.org/10.21061/alan.v42i3.a.2, 3.
20 Gérard Genette, Palimpsests (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1977), 1.
21
Genette, Palimpsests, 1.
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work, a text that uses Metatextual elements makes the audience aware of the form they are
looking at. Genette defined metatextuality as the critical relation that a text keeps by
of the concept I define metatextuality as follows: ‘Metatextual texts are self-aware and go
beyond straight forward entailing that the text has more than one layer, whether obvious or
concealed, this allows the reader to find meaning outside of the text.’ 22 Prospectively, when
referencing metatextuality or metatextual elements, this definition is what will be referred to.
whereas all metatextual works are metafictional, not all metafictional words are
the printed words and push readers to see that the book is constructed of established
conventions. 24
Metafictional elements can be found in David Mitchell’s novels. In his article about
metafiction in Cloud Atlas, Kevin Brown argues that “Mitchell uses metafiction differently
from those who have come before him, using such devices as a way of forcing the reader to
consider the importance of narrative in one’s life and the world in general.”25 As mentioned
in the introduction, David Mitchell is often seen as a postmodernist writer, Brown argues that
Mitchell’s metafiction is similar to that of postmodernists in that “he wants to force the reader
to question his or her reality, using the story-within-story technique to explore the next level
outside the story, which is the reader’s reality.” 26 In Cloud Atlas Mitchell does this by
knitting together the narratives of each of the succeeding narrators. By tying them together,
22 Genette, Palimpsest, 2.
23 Michael Kaufmann, Textual Bodies: Modernism, Postmodernism, and Print (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell
University, 1994), 15.
24
Kaufmann, Textual Bodies, 15.
25 Kevin Brown, “Finding Stories to Tell: Metafiction and Narrative in David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas ,” Journal
of Language, Literature and Culture 63, no. 1 (February 2016): pp. 77-90,
https://doi.org/10.1080/20512856.2016.1152078, 78.
26
Brown, Finding Stories to Tell, 77.
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the tales of the predecessors get merged into the tales of the narrator at hand. 27 Moreover,
Mitchell uses different types of narrative to structure his story: a journal, letter, spoken word,
memoir, interview, and novel. This is what Genette refers to when he suggests that narrative
implies a study of relationships: on the one hand the link between a discourse and the events
it narrates, and on the other hand a relationship between the same discourse and the act that
produces.28
In more contemporary narrative theory, the question of how the stories are conveyed
is taken into consideration, as well as the influence of different kinds of aesthetic order,
arrangement, and inflection. 29 Mitchell, unlike authors from the past, uses narrative
techniques for metafictional purposes. He makes the reader question the importance of
narrative because it reveals a new layer.30 This concept will be explained more thoroughly in
chapter two. It is the consequence of an attempt to connect real or imagined events and
objects in meaningful ways. In other words, how do we order the words in a tale to make
them meaningful, and what are the required relations? Story discourse is not constrained by
natural principles; it can expand and contract, leap backward and forward, and organise its
tale in any sequence it chooses, establishing its own set of rules in the process. 31 Narratives
do not necessarily alter the story directly, but they do change the characters and stress the
value of narrative, giving them the motivation to tell their own tales. 32
In conclusion, metafiction concerns itself with the display of the process of the
novel’s creation. What typifies metafictional novels is the principle of layering. There is
simultaneously a fiction and creation of that fiction in the text.33 The author will consciously
27 Peter Childs, “Food Chain: Predatory Links in the Novels of David Mitchell,” Études Anglaises Vol. 68, no.
2 (August 2015): pp. 183-195, https://doi.org/10.3917/etan.682.0183, 187.
28
Genette, Palimpsests, 2.
29 Kent Puckett, Narrative Theory (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 2.
30
Brown, Finding Stories to Tell, 81.
31
Puckett, Narrative Theory, 2.
32
Brown, Finding Stories to Tell, 80.
33
Waugh, Metafiction, 6.
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draw attention to the text, inviting the reader to the thoughts and intellectual processes that
went into creating the text, and the uses and purposes of the creation of novels. It makes the
reader question what to expect from texts and alters the way in which they perceive the novel,
drawing attention to the status of the work as an artefact. Finally, metafictional elements
make the reader question the relationship between fiction and reality. The author can include
create uncertainty in the fabric of reality inside the story or establishing fictionality within
drawing attention to the text are most relevant as they reveal the second layer of meaning in
Mitchell’s texts.
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will discuss the structure of the novel. I will argue that the novel uses circularity to achieve
metafiction. Then I will move on to the reliability of the narrative. As discussed in the
theoretical framework, Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas has often been characterized as postmodern
because he “forces the reader to question his or her reality by using a story-within-story
technique.”34 We can uncover similar themes in Ghostwritten, which make the reader
question the truth of the story. Aditionally I will examine the use of motifs. I argue that
motifs are used to create layers to the story that start a debate of meaning. Finally, I touch
contrasting real- and fake events. I aruge that by use of true historical events, fake events in
this novel become real, because they are set in the same context.
Ghostwritten can be seen as a collection of short novellas, all with their own
protagonist, which connect to each other through moments of apparent coincidence. The
novel touches upon different eras, countries, and genres. All the chapters are named after the
different places in which the narrative is set, from Japan to Russia to England. Often
characters return in the other chapters, or their actions influence the events in the chapter at
hand.
The narrator of the first and final chapter is Quasar, a doomsday cultist who has committed a
terrorist attack on a subway in Tokyo. By opening and closing the novel with the same
protagonist, Mitchell creates a circular structure. This circular structure can also be observed
in the novel’s opening and closing lines, which read: “Who was blowing on the nape of my
neck?”35 Whereas, at first glance, this may seem like an arbitrary opening line, a repetition
34
Brown, Finding Stories to Tell, 77.
35 David Mitchell, Ghostwritten (London, UK: Hodder and Stoughton, 1999), 3.
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can be observed when we look at the final lines of the book: “Who is blowing on the nape of
my neck? I swing around – nothing but the back of the train, accelerating into the
darkness.”36 After reading the final line, the opening line suddenly falls into place. This
repetition of phrases to create a loop is seen again in London where Alfred Kopf, a retired
wartime spy, tells Marco, who is ghostwriting his memoir, about the time he encountered
himself on the street. 37 An encounter he would have missed if a sudden gust of wind had not
blown the man’s hat off. Alfred explains how he was able to chase the man until he loses him
when his own hat blows off. This is telling because the moment the reader encounters the
repeated phrase they are pushed back to the start of the paragraph. These events, namely
Alfred’s spotting of this man and Alfred losing his own hat in the same manner that the man
did, are only two pages apart and Alfred makes clear statements about how the actions of the
man he sees are just like what he would have done himself “He bent down to pick [the hat]
up, just as I would have done.”38 It is unclear if what Alphred sees is his past- or future self or
if he sees himself from a different timeline. The reader is invited into the process of creation
and compelled to make up their own mind about the meaning. Therefore I argue that the loop
that is created by the repetition of phrases, works as a metafictional element because every
time a loop occurs the reader is made aware of the second layer to the text and the status of
Moving back to the final chapter of the book, the circular structure is not only created
by use of specific words; the events in Underground, the final chapter of the book, in fact,
occur before the narrative of the first chapter. The chapter gives the reader some background
information on realities of the present. For example, Quasar struggles with filling out forms
36
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 436.
37
In this thesis, the names of chapters that correspond to specific geographical locations (e.g. London, Okinawa,
etc.) have been italicalised to overcome confusion as to whether I’m referring to a chapter or a specific setting
within the novel.
38
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 285.
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because his hand has been bandaged in Okinawa. When asked about the cause, Quasar
explains that ‘a door closed on it’. In Underground the reader learns that not just any door
closed on it. Quasar hurt his hand trying to escape the metro after he released a gas attack.
Additionally, and even more importantly, in this final chapter Quasar starts to hallucinate. In
his hallucinations, he sees glimpses of events and characters from the other chapters. The
“saxophone from long ago circles in the air, so sad it could barely leave the ground” 39 is a
reference to Tokyo and a “vinyl shopping bag falls down from a rack. It bulges with a crayon-
coloured web that a computer might have doodled”40 alludes to the London underground and
therefore London. At first glance this merely connects him to all the rest of the narratives, as
up to this point his chapters did not feel related to any of the others. However, when further
analysing the passage, we see something more. Quasar’s actions are part of ‘His
My little brother, we both know that it was not luck which brought you here, love brought you
to us.’ Then he kissed me, and I kissed the mouth of eternal life. ‘Who knows,’ said my
Master, ‘if you continue your alpha self-amplification as rapidly as the minister of Education
reports, you may be entrusted with a very special mission in the future…’ My heart leap still
higher. I had been discussed! Only a novice, but I had been discussed.41
Quasar is unable to think for himself and simply follows orders he has received. When
Quasar starts hallucinating the reader is set out to question what is real and what is not. If the
narrator has been brainwashed, then we cannot trust his narrative. Quasar even says: “What is
real and what is not?”42 Therefore I argue that the events from the novel, that Quasar
39
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 434.
40
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 435.
41
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 10.
42
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 436.
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hallucinates in the final chapter, make the reader question if what happened in the other
chapters even happened at all. This shows that Mitchell uses the metafictional strategy of
creating layers to make the reader question the believability of the story. Therefore, the reader
Comparing the effect of the hallucinations to the effect of the story that Alfred tells
the reader, we observe a parallel. Marco does not take Alfred’s story of the ghost sighting
seriously, he refers to Alfred as nutty and a mad man, and does not wish to include it in a
serious autobiography. Marco later discusses whether this story belongs in an autobiography
with 66-year old publisher Tim Cavendish, who says: “we’re all ghostwriters, my boy. And
it’s not just our memories. Our actions, too. We all think we’re in control of our own lives,
but really, they’re pre-ghostwritten by forces around us.”43 This lets reader once again
question the trustworthiness of the story at hand, and highlights the question of fiction versus
reality. What Alfred perceived as the truth seems like a ghost story to Marco, however, if our
stories are pre-ghostwritten for us then there is no reason to trust Marco’s story either. The
conversation slowly turns into a more philosophical debate, which the reader can
metaphorically join in on. The reader is invited into the process of creating a novel. In Holy
Mountain Mitchell even directly points this out to the reader when his narrator, the tea shack
lady, thinks: “I added ‘writers’ to my list of people not to trust. They make everything up.” 44
This immediately makes the reader question the narrative, if indeed writers make everything
up, then can we trust the narrative? However, only a couple of lines further along the lady
also notes that “it’s not the truth that much matters,” giving the reader once again substance
for consideration.45 They can decide for themselves, if they find it important that the narrator
is reliable. Metafictional texts always redirect the attention of the reader to question the
43
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 296.
44
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 150.
45
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 151.
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reality or fictionality of our existence. By setting up a structure that pushes such ideas onto
the reader, Mitchell moves away from the idea of questioning reality, to the power of stories
In Ghostwritten, what is known as the butterfly effect is what weaves together the
story. The effect entails that: “Small, local inputs of information and coincidences at the front
produce global consequences for the entire system at the end.” 47 The stories are arranged in
such a way that a small event in the narrative story has a bigger impact on the larger
narrative. In Okinawa, Quasar makes a call to a number he has been given and says nothing,
as he was ordered to do by his cult. Then in Tokyo Satoru, the narrator of this chapter and an
employee of a record store receives that call, right when he was about to close the store for
the night. Although he does not think about the strange call for long, it causes him to stay in
his store longer, resulting in his meeting with Tomoyo, with whom Satoru falls in love. They
then influence Neal’s storyline in Hong Kong and so on. We can regard this butterfly effect
chaotic element finds that the metafictional language is subverting his notions about the
linear link between text and the known environment. 48 By using this cause-and-effect
technique, Mitchell once again makes the reader question their own place in the universe.
As mentioned before, metafiction can be achieved when the author uses specific
language to draw the reader’s attention to the text. The title of the novel, Ghostwritten is a
passive voice. In English syntax we use a passive structure when the person or object that
46
Brown, Finding Stories to Tell, 81.
47 Nancy Katherine Hayles, Chaos and Order: Complex Dynamics in Literature and Science (Chicago: Univ. of
Chicago Press, 1999), 71.
48 Cory A. Reed, “Chaotic Quijote: Complexity, Nonlinearity, and Perspectivism,” Hispania 77, no. 4 (1994): p.
738, https://doi.org/10.2307/345699.
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object that experiences the action, instead. Taking this grammatical structure into account,
“the form of ‘ghostwritten draws attention away from the subject that does the writing. This
underscores the semantics of the word and puts the emphasis on the result” this would then
suggest that the narrators in these short stories have no significant value.49 They are in
control; however, we do not know who they are, nor does it matter. “There is no central, all-
result of the writing, the writer itself moves to the background creating a ghostly voice.
Dissecting the word ‘Ghostwritten’ further, another important theme in the novel can
be found. Ghosts play a central role in the novel. Besides the ghostly voice of the narrator,
multiple “actual” ghosts make appearances in various chapters. Alfred’s encounter with
himself, even though he would not refer to what he saw as a ghost, can be seen as an example
of this. Furthermore, in Hong Kong Neil Brose, an expatriate lawyer, and his girlfriend Katy
Unless you’ve lived with a ghost, you can’t know the truth of it. You assume that morning,
noon and night, you’re walking around obsessed, fearful and waiting for the exorcist to call.
It’s not really like that. It’s more like living with a very particular cat. For the last few months
I’ve been living with three women. One was a ghost, who is now a woman. One was a woman
who is now a ghost. One is a ghost, and will always be. But this isn’t a ghost story: the ghost
is in the background, where she has to be. If she was in the foreground she’d be a person.51
49 Pieter Vermeulen, “David Mitchell's Ghostwritten and the ‘Novel of Globalization’: Biopower and The
Secret History of the Novel,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 53, no. 4 (July 2012): pp. 381-392,
https://doi.org/10.1080/00111619.2010.511318, 382.
50 Vermeulen, David Mitchell's Ghostwritten and the ‘Novel of Globalization, 382.
51
Mitchell Ghostwritten, 285.
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The night of the ghost’s first appearance is the night Katy comes home and tells Neal
she wants to try and have a baby. It is ironic that while they speculate that the girl “is the
child of a gwai lo man and a maid. The man would have left, and the maid flung the girl off
one of these buildings,”52 Neal is having an affair with his maid and Neal and Katy are unable
to get pregnant. The ghosts draw a parallel between speculation and reality. Mitchell
celebrates the power of imagination in creating these ghostly characters because they have
Another strategy that Mitchell uses is that of motifs. In Ghostwritten a word that
became such a motif is ‘a quasar’. A quasar is “an astronomical object of very high
luminosity found in the centres of some galaxies and powered by gas spiralling at high
velocity into an extremely large black hole. The brightest quasars can outshine all of the stars
in the galaxies in which they reside, which makes them visible even at distances of billions of
light-years. Quasars are among the most distant and luminous objects known.”53 When Satoru
in Tokyo first meets Tomoyo, who he describes as completely different from all the other
girls “she pulsed, invisibly, like a quasar” 54 it is then seemingly coincidental that he later
receives a phone call from the terrorist we know as Quasar.55 This small coincidence has big
consequences because this is what sets the butterfly effect into motion. Moreover, as quasars
are one of the most powerful energies in the universe, it is fitting that the terrorist who held in
his hands the power to poison many people in the metro is given this nickname.
is mentioned in almost every chapter (except for Tokyo and Underground). Though the tree
has a variable global reputation, it has long cultural and historical ties with Japan. The species
52
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 151.
53 “Quasar,” Encyclopædia Britannica (Encyclopædia Britannica, inc.), accessed June 11, 2022,
https://www.britannica.com/science/quasar.
54
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 41.
55
Patrick O’donnel. A Temporary Future: The Fiction of David Mitchel. New York, NY: Bloomsbury, 2015,
26.
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is one of the country's oldest and biggest living trees, with many being protected by the
government. The camphor was often used to treat disease as it contains therapeutic
characteristics that have long connected the tree to notions of health and safety. Moreover,
the trees are spiritually significant as they could be home to tree spirits that are associated
with those same notions of healing and protection, making the tree sacred. However, grave
misfortune is said to follow those who cut down these trees.56 Mitchell’s referencing to this
spiritual tree is no coincidence. For example, in Hong Kong Neal mentions the tree on his
way up the mountain “I saw Buddha’s head above the camphor trees, almost close enough to
touch.”57 It is on this mountain that he will eventually die while considering the meaning of
love and life, which he had thought to be unimportant during the rest of his life.
If we were to view Quasar as the antagonist of the story, we could draw a parallel
between his attack on the subway and the harming of the camphor tree. When he encounters
the tree, this would then foreshadow grave misfortune on this path to come. Finally, the tree
is mentioned in all but two chapters. I argue that by leaving the reference of the tree out of
these narratives a new debate can be started. The reader is made to speculate as to why this
was done. Mitchell carefully placed these references in the different narratives; therefore he
must have also deliberately left them out of the other two. Mitchell uses this metafictional
metafiction. Although the circular structure of Ghostwritten may suggest that the rest of the
contents are chronological, this is in fact not the case. Several chapters are set in the past or
include flashbacks, and some span over multiple decades. During these decades, references to
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actual historic events are made. An important event in Ghostwritten is the Tokyo subway
attack.
The Tokyo subway attack of 1995 coordinated multiple-point terrorist attack in Tokyo on
March 20, 1995, in which the odourless, colourless, and highly toxic nerve gas sarin was
released in the city’s subway system. The attack resulted in the deaths of 12 (later increased to
13) people, and some 5,500 others were injured to varying degrees. Members of the Japan-
based new religious movement AUM Shinrikyo (since 2000 called Aleph) were soon
By referencing real events the reader is made aware that, similar to the way novels are
crafted, the past is also constructed through narrative.59 This strategy is used to reveal to the
reader that reality is filtered through storytelling. Using historical events in literature has an
influence on the reader. Linda Hutcheon defined term historiographic metafiction as: fiction
that details history.60 Both fiction and history can be identified as linguistic constructs. This
reveals that storytellers may silence and exclude events, and, by connecting history to fiction,
argues that historians have done the same. 61 A novel with elements of historiographic
metafiction forces the reader to question their interpretations of history and fiction. 62 Mitchell
uses historiographic metafiction by placing his narrative within what the reader perceives as
‘real’ history. By juxtaposing these two images, genuine events are fictionalised, and
fictitious occurrences may look real in this setting. Ghostwritten gives the reader insight in
what could have happened preceding this brutal attack, but we know that what is on the page
58
“Tokyo Subway Attack of 1995,” Encyclopædia Britannica (Encyclopædia Britannica, inc.), accessed June
11, 2022, https://www.britannica.com/event/Tokyo-subway-attack-of-1995.
59
Cross, “The (Im)Possibility of Objectivity,” 3.
60
Hutcheon, A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction, 105.
61
A poetics of postmodernism, 107
62
A poetics of postmodernism, 105.
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is fiction. In this narrative, metafictional strategies allow readers to question the notion of a
stable identity and construct positions from which they can critique a text while reading it. 63
structuring of the novel. Mitchell has created a circularity that draws the attention of the
reader and makes them aware of the fact that they are reading a text. Additionally Mitchell
invites the reader to the process of creation of the novel. By employing these strategies,
Mitchell creates layers in the story that force the reader to look beyond the surface and
question the truth of the story, highlighting the contrast between fiction and reality. When
reading a novel, even though a reader is aware of the fact that they are reading fiction, the
narrative often feels real and meaningful. When the reader is made to question that reality
they are forced to think about why stories matter. As mentioned, Ghostwritten was Mitchell’s
debut novel. The strategies that he uses in this novel can also be found in Mitchell’s later
63
Cross, “The (Im)Possibility of Objectivity,” 3.
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examine what strategies from Ghostwritten Mitchell re-uses, and in what ways his approach
has changed. In this chapter I argue that Mitchell uses metafictional elements to draw the
readers attention to the creation of the novel and therefore the reality of the story. Moreover,
he uses names to create layers in the story and make the reader question their own truth. In
addition to these points I will discuss the use of reappearing characters to counter the
The Bone Clocks is a story told in six parts, with an intricate plot which revolves
around the life of Holly Sikes who unknowingly becomes an important asset in a war
between two groups of immortal beings. Each chapter is a step in time of about a decade,
starting with the first chapter in the year 1984 and ending with a final chapter in 2043.
Additionally, each chapter is narrated by a different character as David Mitchell often does in
his novels. With each narrative the story is unfolded more, geographically, temporally, and in
person. Though most of the story is told in the present tense, for the reader the narrative
moves from the past in which Holly is a teenage runaway, to the future in which she is an old
lady. Holly starts of as a chess piece in a war that exceeds beyond the physical world into a
more spiritual realm. She later becomes more essential to the plot as we learn more about her
and her psychic abilities. The contrast between everyday settings and fantastical or out of our
world narratives challenges the conventions of genre. The naturalness and truth of realism is
In similarity to Ghostwritten, The Bone Clocks’s first and final chapter are narrated
by the same person and a connection is formed between the first and final lines. The book
opens with Holly looking out the window “I fling open my bedroom curtains, and there’s the
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thirsty sky and the wide river full of ships and boats and stuff…” 64 In the final lines Holly is
waving her grandchildren goodbye as they embark on a journey “for one voyage to begin,
another voyage must come to an end, sort of.” 65 Both lines have references to boats which are
often used to symbolise a journey. Additionally, both chapters account for three days in the
In Crispin Hershey’s Lonely Planet – 2015 we meet Crispin Hershey, an author with a
habit of referring to himself in the third person, living off his early success of his novel
I assert that the author of Njal’s Saga deploys the very same narrative tricks used later by
Dante an Chauser, Shakeseare and Molière, Victor Hugo and Dickens, Halldór Laxness and Virginia
Woolf, Alice Munro and Ewan Rice. What tricks? Psychological complexity, character development,
the killer line to end a scene, villains blotched with virtue, heroic characters speckled with villainy,
The reader is made aware of narrative tricks that are often used by authors, allowing
them to speculate if these tricks are present in this novel as well. ‘The villain blotched with
virtue’ for example, could refer to Hugo Lamb. He is one of the antagonists of the novel who
has a change of heart in the climax, he allows Holly to escape and, in doing so, gives up his
immortality. This narrative trick, of making the reader aware that they are reading a novel by
referring to it in the text, is something that we saw before in Ghostwritten when Alfred tells
his ghost story so that Marco can write it down in his autobiography.
64
David, Mitchell. The Bone Clocks. Londen, UK: Hodder & Stoughton, 2014, 3.
65
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 595.
66
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 362.
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I have never seen a ghost, Marco. … Yet one extraordinary thing occurred one summer
evening in 1947. I want you to include it in my autobiography … just write it like I tell it, so
the reader can make up his own mind. The ghost comes in the first paragraph.67
The reader is pulled into the process of creation and the story gets another layer. Often
readers speculate what the author meant by certain passages. The audience will debate the
meaning of the lines and their effect. However, this paragraph shows that Alfred wants the
reader to make up their own mind about the story at hand. He tells the story as he experienced
it, yet he leaves the interpretation of the passage to the reader. This is a metafictional element
because what appears to be a text on the surface level has a second layer under the surface
that the audience needs to find themselves, and this quote reveals that strategy to the reader.
In addition, the reader is made aware that what they are reading is fiction when Alfred alludes
to how this story will be build up. This is something that we also see in The Bone Clocks
when Hershey addresses the reader directly or makes cynical comments on writing styles of
other authors, drawing attention to the story being a novel. “A book can’t be a half fantasy
any more than a woman can be half pregnant.” 68 Not much time after making this comment
Hershey encounters one of the anchorites looking for Holly. The torture Hershey endures, he
describes as being pulled off his feet by a giant’s fist. A giant, of course, is a well-known
fantastical being. Turning back to his comment about half fantasies; if a novel can’t be a half
fantasy, then, because of the paranormal events this novel must be a full fantasy. Every
comment comes back to what is real and what is not. The Bone Clocks forces the reader to
question the truth of the narrative in the same manner that Ghostwritten does.
In contrast to the previous point, in The Bone Clocks something else is added to the
narrative. What, at first, may come across as a fun incident turns out to be a deliberate
67
Mitchell, Ghostwritten, 285
68
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 349.
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strategy: the reappearance of characters throughout the different novels. This is something
that Mitchell is famous for, and that many readers look for when diving further into the
‘ubernovel.’ In Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks, there are three such characters; ‘The
Texan’ with two men in black, Dwight Silverwind, and Mo Muntervary and her family. In the
entirety of The Bone Clocks there are 12 returning characters from Mitchells books. They
appear at different times in both novels, not being essential to the plotline, however they
often slightly alter the scene. These characters also bring with them another layer. David
Mitchell often uses metafictional elements to make the reader question the truth or reality of
the story they are reading. By using metafictional elements, as mentioned in this thesis,
Mitchell invites the reader to question the relationship between fiction and reality. Most of
the time this results in the reader becoming part of the bigger debate and as I have argued in
this thesis to question the narrative. By having returning characters, I argue that Mitchell uses
metafiction to the opposite result. When the reader encounters a character that they know
from another book, that character brings with them a history. The reader has previously
formed a connection with this character which makes them real in the mind of the reader.
Encorporating a character that is real or believable, in the novel at hand, has an effect. It gives
the reader a handhold for the truth of the story. Because the character was real in the first
book, when they appear in the second book, this narrative becomes instantly believable.
Therefore, there is no question that what we are reading is the truth. In The Bone Clocks there
are many fantastical elements which would make the reader view the story as fiction.
However, now that real characters have appeared, the reader will have to re-evaluate their
judgement.
celebrity”, a position which he and Hershey share.69 Both Mitchell and Hershey are
69
O’donnel, A Temporary Future, 171.
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succesfull writers bringin out new novels. Hershey’s latest novel, Echo Must Die, is criticised
One: Hershey is so bent on avoiding cliché that each sentence is as tortured as an American
whistleblower. Two: the fantasy sub-plot clashes so violently with the book’s State of the World
pretentions, I cannot bear to look. Three: what surer sign is there that the creative aquifers are dry than
With these words David Mitchell, not even subtly, criticises his own novel and
writing style, almost making Hershey a caricature of him, David Mitchell, self. The reader is
forced to evaluate their view of this novel because the third point of critique on Hershey’s
novel, the presence of a writer character, is equally true for ‘The Bone Clocks’ itself.
Therefore, the reader is made to speculate if the novel is filled with tortured sentences in an
A couple of lines later, Hershey counters the comments on his novel with “in
publishing it’s easier to change your body than it is to switch genre.” 71 What is interesting
about this counterreaction is that ironically, in this novel it is quite easy to change bodies for
the horologists. All they have to do is die and they are reborn in another host. Therefore I
aruge that Mitchell is using these lines to allude to his own status as a writer. As mentioned in
the introduction of this thesis, David Mitchell’s novels have often been put in the postmodern
genre even when he does not necessarily identify himself that way, he cannot get rid of the
label. To break free of this Mitchell employs strategies such as the challenging of
expectations. For example, a lot of what we might refer to as major events in the life of the
main protagonist happen off page. Events such as the aftermath of Jacko’s disappearance,
70
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 282.
71
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 282.
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Holly’s marriage with Ed Bruebeck, the death of Ed, her battle with cancer, and finally the
death of Holly’s daughter Aiofe as a result of climate change, are subjects that we would
expect to find in a novel. Mitchell breaks those expectations by only refering to them when
necessary and making the reader aware of the process of creation of the novel instead.
elements. I argue that in The Bone Clocks this is achieved through the deliberate naming of
people or importance of names to the story. Names are important in The Bone Clocks. For
example, Marinus’ saying of Esther Little’s true name brings her back to life after having
lived in Holly’s body for many years. When the reader becomes aware of the importance of
names, they start seeing interesting connections. The character Hugo Lamb is an example of
this. The last name Lamb carries a Christlike innocence as a lamb is often associated with
Jesus as the lamb of God, or sacrifice. However, Hugo is one of the least likeable and most
selfish characters in this novel. His character even achieves immortality for the time being
though unfortunate for him, at the end, his deal expires. Therefore, I argue that his name in a
way foreshadowed his fate. Furthermore, it is ironic that Hugo is the one to use the phrase
‘the bone clocks’ and therefore explaining the book’s title. The phrase is used to refer to the
life of humans as they are “They [the anchorites] cured me of a terrible wasting disease called
mortality. There’s a lot of it about. The young hold out for a time, but eventually even the
dribbling … bone clock, whose face betrays how very, very little time they have left.”72
Hugo, and the other anchorites, view human life as weak and limited. I argue that this makes
the reader question their own mortality as they would be so called ‘bone clocks’ themselves.
72
Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, 501.
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This time the reader is forced to think about their own place in the universe when the debate
strategies used in Ghostwritten. David Mitchell again uses specific language, in this novel,
names, to make the reader aware of the fact that they are reading a book and loops to create a
circular structure. He challenges the contrast between everyday settings and fantastical or out
of our world narratives by pointing the readers attention to the creation of the novel and its
status as a half-fantasy and makes them question the believability of such a work. This
creates layers in the novel that function as metafictional elements. Finally, since his debut
novel Mitchell has added the use of recurring characters to his strategies. If the reader has
encountered them in one of Mitchell’s other books, they bring with them a history or a
reality. Because the other novel has brought them to life the reader regards their story as true
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Conclusion
In this thesis I examined the ways in which metafiction is achieved in David Mitchell’s
Ghostwritten and The Bone Clocks. Postmodern authors often use metafictional strategies in
their works to reject explicit meanings and make the reader aware of the works’ fictionality.
Mitchell uses various metafictional strategies to pull away from this label. In his debut novel
he uses aspects such as structuring his novel in a circular way and creating characters that
allude to their own sanity to make the reader question the trustworthiness of his narrative.
The reader is invited into the debate of fiction versus reality. Additionally, in Ghostwritten
Mitchell uses motifs to give deeper meaning to the text. As he often mentions in his
interviews, Mitchell is very aware of his use of language and the effect thereof, by using
recurring phrases the reader is invited into the process of creation and made to further
question the meaning of the text. That Mitchell is skilled with the construction of words is
additionally apparent in The Bone Clocks through the use of names. Whereas the motifs in
Ghostwritten serve as metafictional elements that lead to a second layer in the text, the use of
names fosters the same result in The Bone Clocks. The presense of these layers forces the
reader to look below the surface level of the text and into the creation of the work. It makes
After writing his debut Mitchell enlarged the use of recurring characters throughout
one novel to a bigger scale. When reading Mitchell’s works, one can always look for
characters from different novels to make an appearance. These characters do not just exist
merely for the entertainment of the reader, they also add a new layer to the story. Because
Mitchell often uses metafiction to make the reader question the reliability of his narratives,
we could lose faith in the truth of these stories. By adding recurring characters, the opposite is
achieved. When a reader encounters a character that they perceived as real in another novel,
that character brings with them a history that makes the narrative believeable and because
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they can be trusted the narrative at hand becomes believable. The novel regains a sense of
draw attention to the status of the book as a work of fiction. By addressing the reader directly
or making his characters point out narrative tricks, as is done by the tea shack lady in
Ghostwritten and Crispin Hershey in The Bone Clocks, the reader starts to look for these
features in the text and think about their meaning. Using metafictional elements always
comes back to making the reader think about the fictional status of a text. The text has a self
conscious layer and Mitchell’s works have many of these layers for the reader to look for.
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