Cloud Cuckoo Land

Cloud Cuckoo Land

  • Downloads:9187
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-09-26 10:51:02
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Anthony Doerr
  • ISBN:1982168439
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

Thirteen-year-old Anna, an orphan, lives inside the formidable walls of Constantinople in a house of women who make their living embroidering the robes of priests。 Restless, insatiably curious, Anna learns to read, and in this ancient city, famous for its libraries, she finds a book, the story of Aethon, who longs to be turned into a bird so that he can fly to a utopian paradise in the sky。 This she reads to her ailing sister as the walls of the only place she has known are bombarded in the great siege of Constantinople。 Outside the walls is Omeir, a village boy, miles from home, conscripted with his beloved oxen into the invading army。 His path and Anna’s will cross。

Five hundred years later, in a library in Idaho, octogenarian Zeno, who learned Greek as a prisoner of war, rehearses five children in a play adaptation of Aethon’s story, preserved against all odds through centuries。 Tucked among the library shelves is a bomb, planted by a troubled, idealistic teenager, Seymour。 This is another siege。 And in a not-so-distant future, on the interstellar ship Argos, Konstance is alone in a vault, copying on scraps of sacking the story of Aethon, told to her by her father。 She has never set foot on our planet。

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Reviews

Dee

I wasn't sure that I was going to like this book for at least the first 75-100 pages。 I even considered abandoning it (especially since at 600+ pages, it's a bit of a doorstop)。 But something captivated me so I kept going。 [Side note: while the book is long, there are lots of chapter and section breaks that include a few blank pages。 It also reads quickly, so while it has a big page count, it didn't take me nearly as long to read as, say, the similarly-sized autobiography by Obama。)There are fiv I wasn't sure that I was going to like this book for at least the first 75-100 pages。 I even considered abandoning it (especially since at 600+ pages, it's a bit of a doorstop)。 But something captivated me so I kept going。 [Side note: while the book is long, there are lots of chapter and section breaks that include a few blank pages。 It also reads quickly, so while it has a big page count, it didn't take me nearly as long to read as, say, the similarly-sized autobiography by Obama。)There are five separate stories in this novel, plus the ancient Greek story that touches all of the stories。 Two stories are set in the 15th Century in what would become Turkey。 Two more are mainly set in Lakeport, Idaho in the 20th Century。 And another is set in the future on board a space ship that has left Earth in search of a habitable planet。 So it's a lot to take in! The stories set in the same time period intertwine, and the POVs alternate between the two stories/characters。 Each character seeks a bigger life, but each ultimately finds that they had what they were looking for all the time。 (Holy Dorothy Gale!) The novel asks questions about what is a meaningful life? How do you live in opposition to your time and surroundings? What will you do when you are faced with a great challenge - what is real bravery?An ancient Greek tale is important to each of the protagonists for very different reasons。 Each, in her or his own way ensures that the tale survives。 And that story, which can seem somewhat silly, has a meaningful impact on all of them。 The environment and what humans are doing to the environment also plays a huge role in the novel。 The story is hopeful。。。but also heartbreaking。 While I initially thought about abandoning it, I'm glad I pushed forward。 I'm rather in awe of what Doerr was able to accomplish here, and after I really got into it, I found myself eagerly looking forward to reading more about Anna, Omeir, Seymour, Zino, and Konstance。 。。。more

Kelly

Cloud Cuckoo Land will easily make my top 10 books of the year! I adored this story within a story - a tribute to books and their power to change lives and endure。 There are multiple storylines set in the past (15th century Constantinople), present (Idaho), and future (somewhere in space) and they all intersect with an ancient Greek text, Cloud Cuckoo Land。I am always going to root for the underdogs and this story was no exception。 Anna and Omeir come from vastly different backgrounds under the Cloud Cuckoo Land will easily make my top 10 books of the year! I adored this story within a story - a tribute to books and their power to change lives and endure。 There are multiple storylines set in the past (15th century Constantinople), present (Idaho), and future (somewhere in space) and they all intersect with an ancient Greek text, Cloud Cuckoo Land。I am always going to root for the underdogs and this story was no exception。 Anna and Omeir come from vastly different backgrounds under the Ottoman Empire but both have faced hardships and have learned to rely on themselves。 Through sheer determination Anna convinces an old tutor to teach her to read and she discovers the ancient text。In Idaho, Zeno Ninis and Seymour Stuhlman are on a collision course where their lives intersect as Zeno - now an old man - is working with children at the local library to put on a play of Cloud Cuckoo Land。 Zeno is probably my very favorite with a backstory that feels so real and heartbreaking and beautiful。And in the 22nd century, we meet teenager Konstance who is traveling in search of a more promising habitation than the blighted Earth she and her family left behind。Doerr weaves a masterful story as these stories evolve around one another, always compelling and interesting and bringing these disparate characters to life。 Fragments of the ancient Greek text "Cloud Cuckoo Land" separate the storylines and then draws them together。 I confess it was a bit confusing at the start for me, but once you get a feel for the story the payoff is well worth it。I read this on audiobook, switching back to an eARC on Kindle from time to time, and both formats worked well。 So well that I may have to pick up a hard copy just to have on my shelf。 Thank you NetGalley and LibroFM for the ARC/ALC versions of this wonderful, warm-hearted, and beautiful tribute to the art of storytelling。 。。。more

Jodie

I was intrigued by this one after the success of All the Light We Cannot See, so I could not resist the opportunity to read the ARC。 This book does not lack for pages or words。 I like some of the characters and storylines more than others。

high priest

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Em & Tess

。 。 。 ⭑ ⭑ ⭑ ⋆ ⭒Well, this was unexpected, and I’m pleasantly surprised。 In its own way, it’s almost genre-less, or at least genre-fluid, which is pretty neat。 I can say with certainty that I’ve never read a book with as long of a timeline as this one - it has five different perspectives, and spans seven hundred years - it is definitely a lot of ground to cover for one book, but it managed to hold my interest throughout。 That being said, it did feel like it was a bit too much。 After finishing, my 。 。 。 ⭑ ⭑ ⭑ ⋆ ⭒Well, this was unexpected, and I’m pleasantly surprised。 In its own way, it’s almost genre-less, or at least genre-fluid, which is pretty neat。 I can say with certainty that I’ve never read a book with as long of a timeline as this one - it has five different perspectives, and spans seven hundred years - it is definitely a lot of ground to cover for one book, but it managed to hold my interest throughout。 That being said, it did feel like it was a bit too much。 After finishing, my initial thought was that there were some perspectives that I enjoyed more than others, but on reflection, I don’t think that’s necessarily true。 I was invested in each of the character’s stories, but it may have been one or two too many when appreciating the book as a whole。 I enjoyed Konstance’s storyline, but felt that it was too distant from the others。 On the opposite end, the story of Anna & Omeir pulled me in, but felt disjointed for the same reason。 I understood that the intention was to link this large time span, but it felt like it was stretching too far, causing some fraying at the ends。 Additionally, I found the excerpts, as well as the translation folios, of the “Cloud Cuckoo Land” fable to cause an unnecessary break, resulting in me skim reading many of these passages。 This is novel is really about the transcendence power of language and the written word, and in that regard, it succeeded in bringing forth that message。 This book might feel like it’s not for everyone, but I think it likely has something for everyone。 Cloud Cuckoo Land hits shelves September 28th, and was a unique and interesting story, worthy of a read。 Thank you to Net Galley & Scribner Books for this digital advanced readers copy。 ~👩🏻‍🦰 。。。more

Jane

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a digital ARC to review。 I had a really difficult time getting through Cloud Cuckoo Land, and I think I went into it with my expectations too high。 The book follows multiple characters in different time periods and while I usually enjoy books that jump back and forth, this one was very confusing for me。 I think I must have zoned out while reading some portions and even though I finished it, I don't feel I can give a verh detailed rev Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a digital ARC to review。 I had a really difficult time getting through Cloud Cuckoo Land, and I think I went into it with my expectations too high。 The book follows multiple characters in different time periods and while I usually enjoy books that jump back and forth, this one was very confusing for me。 I think I must have zoned out while reading some portions and even though I finished it, I don't feel I can give a verh detailed review since I lost the plot at some point。 The writing itself was beautiful, I just couldn't keep focused because I kept thinking I'd missed something important。 I am sure there are many people who will love the book, it just wasn't for me。 。。。more

Maggie Rotter

I can't imagine who would not love this book。 It links past, present and future in parallel narratives featuring five characters, each a version of a timeless archetype。 Each is a wounded outsider who is initiated into a mystery, embarks on a journey, suffers and eventually effects a final homecoming。 “Cloud Cuckoo Land” is ultimately a celebration of books, myth and the power and possibilities of reading。 By the way, there has been some grumbling about the "trend" of parallel narratives set in I can't imagine who would not love this book。 It links past, present and future in parallel narratives featuring five characters, each a version of a timeless archetype。 Each is a wounded outsider who is initiated into a mystery, embarks on a journey, suffers and eventually effects a final homecoming。 “Cloud Cuckoo Land” is ultimately a celebration of books, myth and the power and possibilities of reading。 By the way, there has been some grumbling about the "trend" of parallel narratives set in long past, troubled present and imagined future。 The latest crop was led by David Mitchell and dates back 17 years - surely no longer trendy。 。。。more

Karen

Having loved All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, I have been anxiously awaiting his new book Cloud Cuckoo Land。 The book alternates between three time periods。 My favorite is where the book starts starts in 2020 in the middle of Idaho in a library。 I think this is my favorite as I spent a lot of time in a library with my mother and my grandmother as a child。。 Eighty-year-old Zeno and a group of fifth grade children。are working on a play about Aethon。 We are exposed to Seymour, a teenag Having loved All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr, I have been anxiously awaiting his new book Cloud Cuckoo Land。 The book alternates between three time periods。 My favorite is where the book starts starts in 2020 in the middle of Idaho in a library。 I think this is my favorite as I spent a lot of time in a library with my mother and my grandmother as a child。。 Eighty-year-old Zeno and a group of fifth grade children。are working on a play about Aethon。 We are exposed to Seymour, a teenager, who plants explosives on a shelf in the library。 I am immediately drawn into this story。 There are two other time periods in the story。 Traveling back in time to 1455, we are introduced to Anna, who is a thirteen-year-old orphan who lives outside the walls of Constantinople with women who embroider robes for the priests。 She reads a story about Aethon and she wants to be a bird so she can fly to Utopia。 Her best friend is Omeir who is a village boy。 The final time period finds Konstance who is a young girl on an interstellar spaceship who studies Aethon。For me, I found the stories interesting but very confusing trying to remember who was who, and then I would get frustrated and start reading a section over。 I do like how Doerr connects the stories and shows us how there are connections over time。 I do think the book could be shortened by maybe 150 pages。 My thanks to Scribner and NetGalley for an ARC of this book。 The opinions in this review are my own。 。。。more

Liz Wine

I had high hopes for this book, but there were some things that were unclear in the resolution of it from my perception, and the different times that sections were written in got a little hard to keep track of, with the start of each new section also being marked by difficult to understand excerpt from a text。

Rose

"Cloud Cuckoo Land" is a book about the past, present, and the future。 The book is held together by an ancient Greek book。 You meet 5 people, each from a different time and through their lives we see how the book has affected their lives。 I was not sure if I would like the book because it is not a typical genre for me, but I was pleasantly surprised。 You have to be able to follow multiple story lines that all merge in the end。 It also deals with what is going on now and what is our hope for the "Cloud Cuckoo Land" is a book about the past, present, and the future。 The book is held together by an ancient Greek book。 You meet 5 people, each from a different time and through their lives we see how the book has affected their lives。 I was not sure if I would like the book because it is not a typical genre for me, but I was pleasantly surprised。 You have to be able to follow multiple story lines that all merge in the end。 It also deals with what is going on now and what is our hope for the future。 I really enjoyed the book and would recommend reading it。Thank you to #goodreads, @AnthonyDoerr, and @Scribner for a copy of this book 。。。more

Zoranne Host

BIG thank you to a scribner for gifting me this book early and libro。fm for early access to the audiobook! i loved this story a lot! it was a long one and i wasn’t convinced in the the first half but by the end i was sobbing my eyes out because it was so heartbreakingly beautiful。 full review to come on tik tok

Lori L (She Treads Softly)

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr is a very highly recommended epic tale of the power of literature across centuries and the interconnectedness of all humans。 It is absolutely one of the best books of 2021。Cloud Cuckoo Land is named after an imaginary world mentioned in Aristophanes's play The Birds and the mythical novel is attributed to Antonius Diogenes, a real writer, in Doerr's novel。 In the saga written for Diogenes' niece during an illness, Aethon, a shepherd, dreams of escaping to the c Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr is a very highly recommended epic tale of the power of literature across centuries and the interconnectedness of all humans。 It is absolutely one of the best books of 2021。Cloud Cuckoo Land is named after an imaginary world mentioned in Aristophanes's play The Birds and the mythical novel is attributed to Antonius Diogenes, a real writer, in Doerr's novel。 In the saga written for Diogenes' niece during an illness, Aethon, a shepherd, dreams of escaping to the cloud cuckoo land in the sky and his desire sets him on an adventure that will have him residing in the bodies of an animal, fish, and bird。There are five characters, all children, whose lives are centuries apart but are also connected: Anna, Omeir, Zeno, Seymour, and Konstance。 Anna and Omeir, are young teens living on opposites sides of the city walls during the 1453 siege of Constantinople。 Anna is a failure as a seamstress, but she does manage to find a way to read ancient Greek。 Omeir is born with a cleft lip。 He and his oxen are drafted to help with the siege。 In the 1950s Zeno Ninis is a teen Lakeport, Idaho, who doesn't fit in and enlists for the Korean war。 As an adult in 2020 he works on translating the ancient Greek text of Diogenes and works with a group of fifth graders on making it into a play。 In the 2000s Seymour is a loner with a sensory disorder which sets him apart, but he bonds with nature which leads him to a radical choice in 2020。 Konstance is living on the Argos, an interstellar spacecraft/ark headed for exoplanet Beta Oph2 in the mid-22nd century。As Doerr alternates between the stories of his characters in short chapters, each of the imaginative, descriptive narratives is equally intriguing and compelling。 The connection between characters is not as apparent in the beginning as it will become later in the novel, but have patience because it will all come together in the end。 Clearly they are all touched by the tale of Aethon's travels and adventures in Cloud Cuckoo Land。 All the characters are outsiders who are resilient and survivors。 They manage to endure and even thrive during difficult times and circumstances。 I cared deeply about each of these characters and their stories。The writing is descriptive, dazzling, and impressive。 Each character is firmly placed in their own timeline and setting and the settings are vividly detailed。 These characters care for the book, the story it tells and the physical copy, and each other。 There is a complicated, beautiful, mortal truth about acceptance, preservation, and survival that runs through the novel, connecting the past, present, and future。 There is also a strong connection to literature and libraries; the novel is dedicated to "the librarians then, now, and in the years to come。"Literature can transform people, provide hope, and heal us, even in a world full of afflictions and concerns。 In a hopeful, realistic, redemptive revelation the truth is exposed that humanity with all of its problems, is what it is and that is enough。 This is an exceptional novel with a lasting impact。 As mentioned, Cloud Cuckoo Land is one of the best books of 2021。 Disclosure: My review copy was courtesy of Simon & Schuster。http://www。shetreadssoftly。com/2021/0。。。 。。。more

Sharon May

Many thanks to NetGalley and Scribner for gifting me a digital copy of the new title by Anthony Doerr, who wrote the amazing All the Light We Cannot See - 4 stars!Told in three different centuries by 5 different voices, all interspersed with a Greek fairytale of sorts about Aethon, a boy who longs to become a bird so he can fly to paradise in the sky。 In the 1400s, Anna is living in a convent in Constantinople, behind closed walls, with her sister。 Anna learns to read and finds Aethon's story, w Many thanks to NetGalley and Scribner for gifting me a digital copy of the new title by Anthony Doerr, who wrote the amazing All the Light We Cannot See - 4 stars!Told in three different centuries by 5 different voices, all interspersed with a Greek fairytale of sorts about Aethon, a boy who longs to become a bird so he can fly to paradise in the sky。 In the 1400s, Anna is living in a convent in Constantinople, behind closed walls, with her sister。 Anna learns to read and finds Aethon's story, which she reads to her sickly sister。 Omeir is a young boy who is forced from his home and tasked to lead his oxen into invading the city where Anna lives。 In the 1940s-present day, we meet Zeno who learned to read Greek in the war and is now elderly and instructing a small group of youngsters at a libraryIn Idaho to perform a play of Aethon's story。 There we meet Seymour, a young environmental idealist。 In the future, Konstance has lived her entire life on an interstellar ship, Argos, with her family。 Her father reads the fairytale to her as well。Whew - that's a lot! This is a beautifully written, very ambitious novel, that at 640 pages is somewhat daunting。 But you get caught up in all these interconnected stories and as the chapters turned, I was anxious to read more about each of these different worlds。 To me, this is what reading is about - finding a book that will transport you into other worlds, listening to other voices。 This book shows how powerful a story can be, because an old Greek story survived, through the protection and diligence of many individuals, to be such an important part of other's lives。 。。。more

Suditi

“A text-a book- is a resting place for the memories of people who have lived before。 A way for the memory to stay fixed after the soul has travelled on。”It is all about a book。A book written by someone for his dying niece centuries ago, who in turn claims that it was not actually written by him but was instead discovered by him in a tomb centuries old still。 Does it really matter who wrote it? We have a story, right? Story of Aethon who lived 80 years a Man, 1 year a Donkey, 1 year a Sea Bass an “A text-a book- is a resting place for the memories of people who have lived before。 A way for the memory to stay fixed after the soul has travelled on。”It is all about a book。A book written by someone for his dying niece centuries ago, who in turn claims that it was not actually written by him but was instead discovered by him in a tomb centuries old still。 Does it really matter who wrote it? We have a story, right? Story of Aethon who lived 80 years a Man, 1 year a Donkey, 1 year a Sea Bass and 1 year a Crow。 A story that helped a girl and a boy in 15th century Constantinople save their lives; a story which an American man spent his life working on, which years later became the death of him。 It is the same story which helped a troubled, broken boy repent for his crimes。 Yes, the story also assists a teenage girl in a spaceship millions of kilometers away from earth in the future to solve the mysteries surrounding her。 There’s a book; a wonderful story。 “But books, like people, die too。 They die in fires or floods or in the mouths of worms or at the whims of tyrants。 If they are not safeguarded, they go out of the world。 And when a book goes out of the world, the memory dies a second death。”Cloud Cuckoo Land is a story dedicated to libraries and librarians all around the world, for keeping the treasures safe。 Reading a book by Anthony Doerr, be it this one or All the Light We Cannot See, feels like watching a weaver weave a cloth。 So many different threads, the characters coming together and forming a piece of fabric that is fine, perfectly exquisite。 The combining of narratives to form a single story, it’s magic! I must say, All the Light We Cannot See still remains the better, the best one for me; but I am not forgetting Cloud Cuckoo Land anytime soon。 。。。more

MsArdychan

Please Note: I received an audiobook copy from Libro。fm (and a print copy from NetGalley) in exchange for an honest review。 This did not influence the opinions in my review in any way。All The Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr, is one of my favorite books of recent years。 So when I heard the author had finally written another book, I was eager to get my hands on it。 I was not disappointed。 This book is a slow burn。 There are really four stories going on here。 Each storyline is completely diff Please Note: I received an audiobook copy from Libro。fm (and a print copy from NetGalley) in exchange for an honest review。 This did not influence the opinions in my review in any way。All The Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr, is one of my favorite books of recent years。 So when I heard the author had finally written another book, I was eager to get my hands on it。 I was not disappointed。 This book is a slow burn。 There are really four stories going on here。 Each storyline is completely different from the others。 They take place at different times, and places, and are filled with vibrant characters。 You know that they are related somehow, but it takes reading most of the book to understand how all the pieces fit together。 I did find it frustrating, at first, because I couldn't understand the structure of the novel, as it does jump around quite a bit。 But I stuck with it and was rewarded with a rich tapestry of people, eras, and stories that are expertly woven together by the author。 I think it's worth listening to the audio version over the print version, as it has wonderful production values, and clues that I picked up that I know I would have missed if I had only read the words on the page。This is a truly special book。Please read my complete review on my blog: www。ponderingtheprose。blogspot。com 。。。more

Jackie ϟ Bookseller

I received a beautiful physical ARC of this title from the publisher in exchange for an honest review。This almost made me cry。 RTC

jessica

its been 7 years since ADs massive success, ‘all the light we cannot see,’ so i was immensely interested in seeing how this next novel would follow up to that kind of pressure and expectation。while there is a lot about this that reminded me of my reading experience with ‘all the light we cannot see,’ its very apparent this story feels drastically more ambitious。 and i think a story like this has to be。 such an ode to the art of storytelling and the profession of storykeeping deserves to be a gra its been 7 years since ADs massive success, ‘all the light we cannot see,’ so i was immensely interested in seeing how this next novel would follow up to that kind of pressure and expectation。while there is a lot about this that reminded me of my reading experience with ‘all the light we cannot see,’ its very apparent this story feels drastically more ambitious。 and i think a story like this has to be。 such an ode to the art of storytelling and the profession of storykeeping deserves to be a grand gesture。 while reading, i was definitely drawn to some POVs more than others, particularly anna and omeirs。 it wasnt until the end, when i could see how everyone was connected, that i appreciated the other characters and their chapters。 it was such a rewarding feeling witnessing how a simple story could be spread throughout time, impacting individuals and, in turn, impacting others。 overall, i think fans of literary fiction and lovers of stories will really value this particular novel。 thank you scribner for the ARC!!↠ 4 stars 。。。more

jocelyn • shesalreadybooked

CLOUD CUCKOO LAND, by Anthony Doerr (4。25)You’re probably seeing this book everywhere right now, and for good reason。 This is Doerr’s long anticipated novel after the successful, 2014 Pulitzer Prize winning novel, ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE。 First I want to express my thanks and gratitude to @simonschusterca for sending me an ARC of CLOUD CUCKOO LAND。 When I requested it I didn’t think I would get it, and I’m immeasurably grateful I had the opportunity to read and review an ARC of this。 My prob CLOUD CUCKOO LAND, by Anthony Doerr (4。25)You’re probably seeing this book everywhere right now, and for good reason。 This is Doerr’s long anticipated novel after the successful, 2014 Pulitzer Prize winning novel, ALL THE LIGHT WE CANNOT SEE。 First I want to express my thanks and gratitude to @simonschusterca for sending me an ARC of CLOUD CUCKOO LAND。 When I requested it I didn’t think I would get it, and I’m immeasurably grateful I had the opportunity to read and review an ARC of this。 My problem is I don’t know how to review this because it’s best going into it knowing little about it。 A synopsis will not do it justice。 What I can share my thoughts on are how it’s essentially a beautiful love letter to libraries, novels and how they connect us。This novel takes place during 3 different time settings and somehow Doerr masterfully connects them all while being different genres in each: a little bit of sci-fi, fantasy, historical and literary fiction, he beautifully blends it all together and makes it seem effortless。I won’t pretend like I knew what was going on the entire time, at times I felt like I wasn’t smart enough for it, but it left me speechless nonetheless。My main issue is that some parts seemed too wordy for me (I know, coming from me), but that doesn’t take away from how beautiful a storyteller Doerr is。 Having just finished it last night, I feel like I haven’t had enough time for it to settle in, but I feel as time goes on this will be a novel I think of frequently。 Thank you again @simonschusterca for this gifted copy。 CLOUD CUCKOO LAND will be released on 09/28。 “For the librarians then, now, and in the years to come” — Anthony Doerr 。。。more

Bam cooks the books ;-)

RTF。。。

candy floss

Oh dear lord! Was this or was this not stunning! My book of the year hands down。

Cindy

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for the ARC!What a great story! Loved reading about all the different characters。 It was not difficult at all to follow the 3 different timelines。 Very thought provoking! Will definitely get this on audiobook! Looking forward to it。

Katie

Spanning centuries of time and various characters' perspectives, Cloud Cuckoo Land tells and retells the story of Aethon, who longs to turn into a bird and fly away to a paradise in the sky。 Anna is 13 years old and orphaned living in Constantinople。 She learns to read and devours the story of Aethon。 At the same time, Omeir, a neighboring village boy, gets swept up into the army invading Constantinople。 500 years later, Zeno, an 80 year old man, is helping five kids put on a play adaptation of Spanning centuries of time and various characters' perspectives, Cloud Cuckoo Land tells and retells the story of Aethon, who longs to turn into a bird and fly away to a paradise in the sky。 Anna is 13 years old and orphaned living in Constantinople。 She learns to read and devours the story of Aethon。 At the same time, Omeir, a neighboring village boy, gets swept up into the army invading Constantinople。 500 years later, Zeno, an 80 year old man, is helping five kids put on a play adaptation of the story of Aethon, which has somehow been preserved all these years。 At the same time, Seymour, a troubled teenager, plants a bomb in the library where the play is being rehearsed。 Finally, in the future, an interstellar ship flies through the sky as Konstance learns the story of Aethon and puts together the pieces of what life on Earth must have been like so many years ago。 This book was so complex and intertwined I was blown away by how the parts of the book converged on one another。 Anthony Doerr is such a talented author, and although the book was lengthy, he managed to keep me captivated to find out what happened to each character in the end。 This book is absolutely for anyone who enjoys Greek mythology, has a passion for storytelling, and is invested in saving books and libraries for the future。 Thank you so much to Scribner for the ARC! 。。。more

Chris McKinney

In Cloud Cuckoo Land, the reader gets the sense that the author has taken everything he loves and stuffed it in one novel。 History (Constantinople and the Korean War), home (Idaho), mythology, and speculative fiction, this is a sweeping, ambitious story。 I really enjoyed listening to the audiobook version of this novel on libro。fm。

Kaileigh Wenglikowski

To say that I was overwhelmed and confused 95% of this book would be an understatement。 This book had five different POV's that spanned hundreds of years and boy was there a lot of information to wrap your brain around。 As you get towards the end some things begin to make more and more sense, but at over 600 pages there was just way more than was necessary to tell this story。 These stories are all connected and tell an amazing story。 However, this book is not for the faint of heart and not for y To say that I was overwhelmed and confused 95% of this book would be an understatement。 This book had five different POV's that spanned hundreds of years and boy was there a lot of information to wrap your brain around。 As you get towards the end some things begin to make more and more sense, but at over 600 pages there was just way more than was necessary to tell this story。 These stories are all connected and tell an amazing story。 However, this book is not for the faint of heart and not for your average pleasure read。 Be committed to hours upon hours of confusion as you try to piece this story together。 。。。more

Caroline

I am a big fan of Anthony Doerr and his writing but Cloud Cuckoo Land was not a book that I enjoyed。 The writing and descriptions are beautiful but I could not embrace the story。 Perhaps when the book is released, I will get a hard copy and try to read it again。 Sometimes holding the book in my hand helps me grasp a storyline better if that makes sense。 Many thanks to Netgalley and Scribner for this advanced readers copy。 This book is scheduled for release on September 28, 2021。

Carolyn Amate

Beautifully written and well constructed it is an amazing book I read Anthony Doerrs prior book All the Light You Cannot See and was so amazed so I was excited to read this book。。 I was surprised however how different it was。。 It is a mixture of different genres in one book Almost like reading 4 books in one storyAnthony Doer described it this way "It is a story about kindness and humanity told through children across places and time in the past, present and future。 "I loved the writing as it wa Beautifully written and well constructed it is an amazing book I read Anthony Doerrs prior book All the Light You Cannot See and was so amazed so I was excited to read this book。。 I was surprised however how different it was。。 It is a mixture of different genres in one book Almost like reading 4 books in one storyAnthony Doer described it this way "It is a story about kindness and humanity told through children across places and time in the past, present and future。 "I loved the writing as it was so beautifully written however I personally enjoyed his prior book much better as I just couldn't get engaged in this bookI feel I need to give this a 3。5 star book for the writing was excellent but the storyline was so so。 。。。more

Jean

One of my favorite books ever is Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See。 So I was anxious to read his newest novel。 It is quite a different premise in that there are five different characters who cross paths, some directly and others indirectly。 Like his previous novel, the focus is on adolescents。 I have to admit that it took me almost a third of the book to be fully engaged and keep the stories and characters straight。 Once being engaged in the "rhythm", I could not put the book down。 Yes One of my favorite books ever is Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See。 So I was anxious to read his newest novel。 It is quite a different premise in that there are five different characters who cross paths, some directly and others indirectly。 Like his previous novel, the focus is on adolescents。 I have to admit that it took me almost a third of the book to be fully engaged and keep the stories and characters straight。 Once being engaged in the "rhythm", I could not put the book down。 Yes, it has aspects of a futuristic world but it did not seem that way to me and I am not a sci-fi reader。 Upon completing the book, I realized what a good book club discussion it would elicit。 Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for an advanced copy。 。。。more

christina

“Stranger, whoever you are, open this to learn what will amaze you。”~Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo LandIn the novel Cloud Cuckoo Land, Anthony Doerr masterfully crafts an epic, complex narrative which unites five diverse characters across centuries, cultures, and continents。 He accomplishes this by means of an invented ancient Greek fable also called “Cloud Cuckoo Land” and a number of richly developed themes。 {For the sake of clarity, I will italicize the novel and put the Greek story title in qu “Stranger, whoever you are, open this to learn what will amaze you。”~Anthony Doerr, Cloud Cuckoo LandIn the novel Cloud Cuckoo Land, Anthony Doerr masterfully crafts an epic, complex narrative which unites five diverse characters across centuries, cultures, and continents。 He accomplishes this by means of an invented ancient Greek fable also called “Cloud Cuckoo Land” and a number of richly developed themes。 {For the sake of clarity, I will italicize the novel and put the Greek story title in quotation marks。} Doerr is best known for his best-selling literary fiction All the Light We Cannot See, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize; because of that book’s popularity and success, it won’t surprise me if the new novel debuts at the top of the fiction charts。 His newest release carries the same intricate detail, multiple narrative voices, and fascination with humanity’s tendency toward the extremes of sublime creation and devastating destruction。 In this review, I hope to introduce you to the characters and stylistic features of Cloud Cuckoo Land, briefly consider the primary themes, and reflect on this book from my evangelical Christian worldview。Cloud Cuckoo Land is written from the points of view of Zeno, an orphaned Greek immigrant building a life for himself in small-town Idaho; Seymour, a fatherless boy with an unnamed psychiatric condition that alienates him from his peers in the same Idaho town; Omeir, a Bulgarian farm boy isolated by a disfiguring medical condition; Anna, a young orphan girl working as a novice embroiderer for a monastery in medieval Constantinople (but really longing to learn and read and go on adventures both real and imagined); and Konstance, another young girl on the spaceship Argos on a mission to find a habitable planet。 In a sense, the fictional Aethon, protagonist of “Cloud Cuckoo Land”, constitutes a sixth narrator。 The voices take their turns and sometimes overlap like the parts in a Bach invention, giving and taking, merging and diverging, in a literary counterpoint。 It seems impossible that they could weave together in a unified whole, but they do。 That said, this book may frustrate readers who dislike multiple narrators or non-linear storytelling。The titular Greek text (invented by Doerr but attributed to the real philosopher Diogenes), the “translation” of which he feeds to the reader piecemeal throughout the novel, proves significant to each character’s life and so integrates the strands of the tale。 That imagined text also establishes the fundamental theme of longing for home (Greek nostos) which preoccupies each character in his or her own way and names the final chapter of the book。 One character defines the word like this: "'Nostos, yes。 The act of homecoming, a safe arrival。 Of course, mapping a single English word onto a Greek one is almost always slippery。 Nostos is also a song about a homecoming…。 In a time,’ he says, ‘when disease, war, and famine haunted practically every hour… Imagine how it felt to hear the old songs about heroes coming home。 To believe that it was possible…。 It’s not so much about the contents of the song。 It’s that the song was still being sung’" (Kindle location 2600)。Their journeys take them on a quest not for the home of house, family, and work, but, like Holly Golightly, for a sort of idealized paradise, “a place where me and things go together。” Ultimately, “Cloud Cuckoo Land” becomes the vehicle that transports each character on his or her quest for home。 The shadowy complement to that theme is the pervasive sense of loneliness and alienation throughout at least the first half of the book; in that regard it felt like work that could only come into being in the last two years。 (Even the character name Zeno sounds like an Americanization of the Greek word xeno, “stranger, alien, foreigner。”) That mood of alienation was so strong for so many pages that I feared it was the primary theme of the whole work。 I might have given up without seeing the characters’ journeys through to redemption if I hadn’t agreed to this review。“When the stream of the old Greek picks up, and she climbs into the story, as though climbing the wall of the priory on the rock—handhold here, foothold there—the damp chill of the cell dissipates, and the bright, ridiculous world of Aethon takes its place…。 Open the [manuscript] box, walk the lines of sentences: the singer steps out, and breathes a world of color and noise into the space inside your head” (Anna, Kindle location 3294, Cloud Cuckoo Land)。Additionally, Cloud Cuckoo Land displays as clearly as any novel I know the power, preciousness, and perishability of books: they reach across cultures, continents, oceans, and centuries to bind their readers together, but the time they can so transcend is also their chief enemy。 For that reason they require caretakers, whether the readers who love them or librarians。 That theme of stewardship also applies to the environmental themes and climate devastation in the book, which for me are the one aspect that verges on heavy-handed。 The motifs of Greek language and literature and birds, in particular owls, also serve to unify the melodies of the different plot lines。This book provides food for theological thinking in a few ways。 First, the fragile, repeatedly lost-and-found Greek story of the title contrasts with the persistent continuity of Bible manuscripts over millennia and throughout the rise and fall of empires。 The Christian Bible has better quality (based on factors like completion and proximity to time of writing) and more abundant historical manuscript evidence than any other ancient book。 There is more historical attestation of the Christian Scriptures than there is of the life of Julius Caesar or Homer’s Odyssey。 (See Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict。 This recent Renewing Your Mind episode also discusses historical and textual evidence the Bible is what it claims to be。) Furthermore, as awestruck as I am by Doerr’s ability to integrate half a dozen narratives into a unified whole, how much more awestruck should I be at the unified metanarrative told by the 66 Bible books, written by dozens of authors in three different languages over a period of 1500 or 1600 years。 The true story woven therein is not fragile or obscure but imperishable and eternally enduring, able even to speak life into dead hearts。 (I know that because God spoke life into mine through the Scriptures。) Third, the magical paradise land of birds which is sought by the hero of the Greek tale “Cloud Cuckoo Land” is ultimately a utopia, a “no place”; the new heavens and new earth promised in the Bible are real and drawing nearer every day。 They are found not by a complicated magical quest but by trusting in the work of Christ to bear our sins and their penalty and give to us His righteousness, thus reconciling us to God and securing our adoption as His sons and daughters。 Though we often feel lonely, even alienated, in this earthly life, the believer in Christ is never truly alone, because (s)he has the Triune God living in him/her, and that relationship bonds any Christian believer now with the community of believers across the world and throughout history into one body。 For now that homesick nostos can be overwhelming, especially in trying times like we are all living through in September 2021。 Yet as C。 S。 Lewis wrote, “If I find in myself desires which nothing in this world can satisfy, the only logical explanation is that I was made for another world” (C。S。 Lewis, Mere Christianity)。 For those who belong to Christ, a day is coming, revealed in the best of all books, when there will be no more death or loss or mourning or pain, when we will truly experience, some of us for the first time, “a place where me and things go together。” Reading Cloud Cuckoo Land reminded me how substantial are the things I hope for; in that and in its craftsmanship, it is time well-spent。(The characters are not Christian believers and act accordingly。 There is some sensuality, including one homosexual character。 There are also beautiful depictions of sacrificial love, friendship, and a happy though improbably marriage。)To sum up, in Cloud Cuckoo Land, Anthony Doerr has perhaps surpassed the literary accomplishment of All the Light We Cannot See。 I loved several of these characters, in a way I don’t recall loving Marie-Laure and Werner。 It is very long and exceedingly complex, and the first half offers little in the way of hope, but the narrative payoff of redemption is all the sweeter for the darkness of its backdrop。 This novel is a love offering to books, librarians, language, and the beauties of this world。 I expect it will win more prizes and enjoy many, many weeks atop best-seller lists。 I hope the thoughts above help you decide whether it’s for you, for now, and provide kindling for your own reflections if you choose to read it。 For it is a book deserving of reflection, not one to read once and check off on Goodreads。{This review is based on an advance galley copy I received in exchange for an honest and timely review。} 。。。more

Allison Polimeno

I was a big fan of All the Light We Cannot See, so when I saw a new novel by Doerr, I immediately wanted to read it。 While I try not to compare works by authors, this book just did not hit the same notes for me as All the Light。 I almost DNF’d this book countless times because it was so heavily descriptive, and I had no idea where it was going until I was about 75% through it。 That’s not to say it was not beautifully written, because it was。 I think maybe it was a bit ambitious and didn’t really I was a big fan of All the Light We Cannot See, so when I saw a new novel by Doerr, I immediately wanted to read it。 While I try not to compare works by authors, this book just did not hit the same notes for me as All the Light。 I almost DNF’d this book countless times because it was so heavily descriptive, and I had no idea where it was going until I was about 75% through it。 That’s not to say it was not beautifully written, because it was。 I think maybe it was a bit ambitious and didn’t really come together for me。 There are multiple characters during multiple timelines spanning centuries。 While these stories eventually show that they share a connection, it is a long and complex journey to get them there。 I love that Doerr dedicated this book to “the librarians then, now, and in the years to come” as I so firmly believe in the power of storytelling。 Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for this ARC! 。。。more

Kennedy Northcutt

I took notes in the beginning, because there were several characters, several timelines and a lot happening。 It helped。 The characters are rich and brilliant。 The stories are heartfelt and human。 The book within a book is confusing and fun。 This work of fiction will definitely make you think—about life, relationships, our past, present and future。 If you loved A Man Called Ove by Backman, you will love Zeno。 If you enjoy a medieval love story, Omer and Anna are for you。 If a romp through space i I took notes in the beginning, because there were several characters, several timelines and a lot happening。 It helped。 The characters are rich and brilliant。 The stories are heartfelt and human。 The book within a book is confusing and fun。 This work of fiction will definitely make you think—about life, relationships, our past, present and future。 If you loved A Man Called Ove by Backman, you will love Zeno。 If you enjoy a medieval love story, Omer and Anna are for you。 If a romp through space is your thing, Konstance is your person。 There is something for everyone。 Even a bit of climate crisis and mental health。 Not a book to pick up and put down again and again。 You will want to read it through from beginning to end。 Definitely one I will read again。 So many layers。 So much humanity。 。。。more