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Showing posts with label peter f. hamilton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peter f. hamilton. Show all posts
Thursday, April 28, 2011
BOOK REVIEW: Broken Angels by Richard Morgan
Richard Morgan's Takeshi Kovacs novels have a stellar reputation among hard core science fiction fans. I have previously enjoyed reading Morgan's first book in the series, the exciting Altered Carbon, which introduces the Takeshi Kovacs character to the world.
In the second book Broken Angels, Morgan puts Kovacs in another compelling and very dangerous situation, while still maintaining the character's unlikeability. The themes of the first book, explicit sexuality, corporate greed, capitalist malfeasance, dangerous technological advances, and dehumanizing violence, all return in even greater amounts in the sequel.
Altered Carbon made Richard Morgan seem like the second coming of Dashiell Hammett with Takeshi Kovacs a 24th century Sam Spade, like a cross between Blade Runner and The Maltese Falcon. I am chosing movies to relate Morgan's book to on purpose. Although Broken Angels is very different from Altered Carbon, it is also so vividly written that the story has substantial cinematic potential. It really seems like it is only a matter of when, not if, we will see major motion pictures based on the works of Richard K. Morgan.
The story this time begins with Kovacs as a mercenary fighting in a civil war on a planet called Sanction IV, as part of a unit called Carrera's Wedge which is helping a company called the Mandrake Corporation achieve its goals during a bloody, planet-wide, military conflict. One of the basic tenets of Broken Angels is that war is commerce conducted by other means (and vice versa!)
Kovacs leaves his unit when he meets Jan Schneider, who says he needs help for a scheme to smuggle an ancient Martian treasure off-world. In order to make their score they need to break out an archaeologist named Tanya Wardani, which Kovacs does and then enlists a mid-level executive named Matthias Hand at the Mandrake Corporation to finance the logistics of the retrieval operation, which of course have to occur dead smack in the middle of the war zone.
The story turns into a cross between Raiders of the Lost Ark and (the first exploration-heavy hour of) Alien. Again, as in the first book, the most important draw is Kovacs, with his near-superhuman reflexes and situational loyalty. Kovacs find and trains an elite team of experienced warriors to go on the expedition with him, but he's really the only one we care about is Kovacs. Kovacs protests (too much) that he only cares about his survival as well but his actions belie this expressed belief. Morgan's action scenes are another highlight of the book, especially when told from Kovacs perspective and internal monologue.
Broken Angels is a memorable entry into the genre of hard-core, hard-bitten military science fiction by another talented British writer. Fans of Peter F. Hamilton and Alastair Reynolds (which includes yours truly) will be thrilled to discover another author who possesses similar adeptness at creating rich, believable future worlds peopled with intelligent characters fighting battles against powerful (and sometimes alien) forces.
Title: Broken Angels.
Author: Richard K. Morgan
Length: 384 pages.
Publisher: Del Rey.
Published: March 2, 2004.
OVERALL GRADE: A (4.0/4.0).
PLOT: A+.
IMAGERY: A.
IMPACT: A-.
WRITING: A.
Labels:
Alastair Reynolds,
books,
books 2011,
peter f. hamilton,
reviews,
sci-fi,
science
Thursday, March 3, 2011
TOR.COM's Top 10 Sci-Fi/Fantasy Books of the Decade
Tor.com has been running a poll of the best science fiction/fantasy books published between 2000-2010 (not really a decade) and now the results of the Top 10 are out:
You can click on the highlighted titles to see my reviews of those books; I am still working on reviews for American Gods and A Storm of Swords.
I am pleased to see that so many books that I have liked on this list but I strongly disagree with the Top choice (I would probably place Rothfuss' book there if I was restricted to this list of 10). I'm also very surprised not to see any books by Peter F. Hamilton or Alastair Reynolds
- Old Man’s War by John Scalzi - 295 votes
- American Gods by Neil Gaiman - 270 votes
- The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss - 231 votes
- Blindsight by Peter Watts - 221 votes
- Kushiel’s Dart by Jacqueline Carey - 194 votes
- A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin - 179 votes
- Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke - 167 votes
- Anathem by Neal Stephenson - 141 votes
- Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson - 125 votes
- Perdido Street Station by China Mieville - 124 votes
You can click on the highlighted titles to see my reviews of those books; I am still working on reviews for American Gods and A Storm of Swords.
I am pleased to see that so many books that I have liked on this list but I strongly disagree with the Top choice (I would probably place Rothfuss' book there if I was restricted to this list of 10). I'm also very surprised not to see any books by Peter F. Hamilton or Alastair Reynolds
Thursday, February 3, 2011
BOOK REVIEW: Iain M. Banks' Surface Detail
I received the latest Banks Culture novel for Chrismuhkwanzakkuh this year from my Amazon wishlist. I'm a big fan of Peter F. Hamilton and Alastair Reynolds, who are also very popular and well-known British science fiction authors. Iain M. Banks is often added to that list, as is Neal Asher, and although I have read books by both of them, the only work by either of them that has come close to being as engrossing to me as a(ny) Hamilton or Reynolds book is Banks' Matter, which was the previous Culture novel.
The latest Culture novel is Surface Detail which is about the nature of death itself, as well as revenge and faith. The central character is Lededje Y'breq, a slave on the planet of Sichult, who is killed by her owner, Joiler Veppers, the richest man in the world. Y'breq is one of the Intagliated, a person who has been genetically engineered with an intricate, strikingly beautiful tattoo (yes, a "surface detail" of the title), which illustrates her indentured servitude and shameful familial debt to Veppers.
Y'breq is revented (reincarnated) by a Culture artifact which had been implanted in her head without her knowledge. The notion of death and after-life is a central theme of Surface Detail. Banks creates the notion that there is a philosophical dispute between various technologically advanced societies: some wish to have a Hell of an after-life while others have no after-life whatsoever. The dispute is currently being resolved through a virtual war between the "pro-Hell and "anti-Hell" forces. The Culture is in the anti-Hell coalition and it turns out that the planet of Sichult and Joiler Veppers is a inter-stellar level player in the dispute over what should happen after death.
As with his other books, Surface Detail is a large book with many characters in addition to multiple plot strands. Unfortunately, many of the characters are not as interesting as as Y'breq and Veppers. For (too) long stretches of the book we are following the stories of other characters such as Prin and Chay, two non-humanoid aliens who are trying to expose the horrific nature of their species' Hell in order to diminish the appeal and salience of perdition. Another character which frankly bored me was Sergeant Vateuil, who is a fighter in the anti-Hell forces, and who may or may not have a connection to a central character in a few of the earlier Culture books.
What I liked about Banks' Matter, was its focus on an appealing central character (Dziet Sma) combined with quirky humor. There is almost no humor in Surface Detail apart from Banks' longtime staple of the names and interactions between ship controlling artificial intelligences called Minds. At this point, that simply was not enough. I will be more skeptical about future Culture books by Banks, probably waiting to get them in paperback at the library instead of in hardcover. They simply are not at the same level of excellence, complexity and creativity as the other British sci-fi masters Hamilton and Reynolds.
Title: Surface Detail
Author: Iain M. Banks
Length: 640 pages.
Publisher: Orbit.
Date: October 28, 2010.
OVERALL GRADE: B/B+.
PLOT: B+.
IMAGERY: B.
IMPACT: B-.
WRITING: B+.
Labels:
Alastair Reynolds,
books,
books 2011,
British,
peter f. hamilton,
reading,
reviews
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