

Broken Angels: Netflix Altered Carbon book 2 : Morgan, Richard: desertcart.ae: Books Review: Broken Angels expands the post-cyberpunk universe of Altered Carbon and shows us other parts of it that we saw only in flashbacks in the last book. It's a war book that does not glamorize violence in any way, and the writer has given some thought about the way war would look like in his future. Finally, if you see a review complaining about "half-wolf sleeves," they've definitely not read the book. I would give an arm and a leg NOT to be in anything that Takeshi Kovacs considers his pack. Review: 'Broken Angels' is the second outing for Envoy-trained Takeshi Kovacs and is an absolutely rip-roaring continuation from the original 'Altered Carbon'. The plot unwinds with breath-taking speed; the action comes fast and furious, bolstered by excellent levels of technological details and character descriptions. Yet Morgan's second outing has met with a fair amount of criticism leveled at under-developed ideas or poor style. Both criticisms are unfair and miss the point of what the novel is trying to achieve. 'Altered Carbon' introduced us to ideas of sleeving, cortical stacks and humans being decanted into either real or virtual worlds. Morgan takes this much further in 'Broken Angels' and asks us to think about what will happen to human beings who live at the interface of technologcal developments, and how that technology will affect both what we are as persons as well as our own sense of who we are. The brilliance of 'Broken Angels' is that he asks us these questions via the characters who are working at and in extreme situations where the rules of who we are are constantly being redrawn all the time. And he does it by using the Martians (the Broken Angels of the title) as a mirror of civilisation so far ahead of us, yet still seemingly sharing the same weaknesses and vices. This is the clue to the style and why he sometimes writes in very short, staccato sentences. As some reviewers have noted he does. Sometimes write. Like. This. But all you have to do is look closely; he only does it when people are speaking. And usually, he only does it when people are speaking under incredibly stressful circumstances or life and death situations. In these situations, people rarely speak in complete sentences. They speak short, quick-fire and often incomplete sentences. This is what Morgan does here - his writing mirrors the reality of the way we speak when stressed and the characters are much more realistic because of it. All in all, this book is a welcome return for Kovacs. The character is so much more developed and, for once, we get to see the man's inner thoughts and processes which helps us understand quite how he does what he does and how future genetic conditioning can take human beings in all sorts of unexpected directions. Brilliant, insightful, and highly entertaining. Well worth every penny.
| Best Sellers Rank | #130,156 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2,128 in Science Fiction Crime & Mystery #4,723 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #8,307 in Literary Fiction |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (608) |
| Dimensions | 12.8 x 3.4 x 19.2 cm |
| Edition | New Ed |
| ISBN-10 | 0575081252 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0575081253 |
| Item weight | 1.05 Kilograms |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 480 pages |
| Publication date | 4 September 2008 |
| Publisher | Gollancz |
A**R
Broken Angels expands the post-cyberpunk universe of Altered Carbon and shows us other parts of it that we saw only in flashbacks in the last book. It's a war book that does not glamorize violence in any way, and the writer has given some thought about the way war would look like in his future. Finally, if you see a review complaining about "half-wolf sleeves," they've definitely not read the book. I would give an arm and a leg NOT to be in anything that Takeshi Kovacs considers his pack.
D**R
'Broken Angels' is the second outing for Envoy-trained Takeshi Kovacs and is an absolutely rip-roaring continuation from the original 'Altered Carbon'. The plot unwinds with breath-taking speed; the action comes fast and furious, bolstered by excellent levels of technological details and character descriptions. Yet Morgan's second outing has met with a fair amount of criticism leveled at under-developed ideas or poor style. Both criticisms are unfair and miss the point of what the novel is trying to achieve. 'Altered Carbon' introduced us to ideas of sleeving, cortical stacks and humans being decanted into either real or virtual worlds. Morgan takes this much further in 'Broken Angels' and asks us to think about what will happen to human beings who live at the interface of technologcal developments, and how that technology will affect both what we are as persons as well as our own sense of who we are. The brilliance of 'Broken Angels' is that he asks us these questions via the characters who are working at and in extreme situations where the rules of who we are are constantly being redrawn all the time. And he does it by using the Martians (the Broken Angels of the title) as a mirror of civilisation so far ahead of us, yet still seemingly sharing the same weaknesses and vices. This is the clue to the style and why he sometimes writes in very short, staccato sentences. As some reviewers have noted he does. Sometimes write. Like. This. But all you have to do is look closely; he only does it when people are speaking. And usually, he only does it when people are speaking under incredibly stressful circumstances or life and death situations. In these situations, people rarely speak in complete sentences. They speak short, quick-fire and often incomplete sentences. This is what Morgan does here - his writing mirrors the reality of the way we speak when stressed and the characters are much more realistic because of it. All in all, this book is a welcome return for Kovacs. The character is so much more developed and, for once, we get to see the man's inner thoughts and processes which helps us understand quite how he does what he does and how future genetic conditioning can take human beings in all sorts of unexpected directions. Brilliant, insightful, and highly entertaining. Well worth every penny.
N**5
This is part 2 of a 3 book set. It continues the story and drive you back into the story years later. I do enjoy these book and looking forward to finishing the 3rd.
M**L
Bien
M**S
'Broken Angels' ist eins dieser Bücher, das nicht nur rasend spannend ist, sondern sich auch im Kopf des Lesers festkrallt, das man nach dem Ende der Lektüre nicht wieder vergisst, das einem noch tagelang, vielleicht über Wochen oder Monate immer wieder im Kopf herumgeht, weil es so tiefgründig, so aufregend, so komplex und faszinierend geschrieben ist. 'Broken Angels' ist der Nachfolger des Romans 'Altered Carbon' (dt. 'Das Unsterblichkeitsprojekt') von Richard Morgan, und zum vollen Verständnis macht es Sinn, den Vorgängerroman zuerst zu lesen, auch wenn die Handlung beider Bücher jeweils in sich abgeschlossen ist. Das Buch spielt in einer Zukunft, in der die Menschheit seit Jahrhunderten eine Reihe ferner Sonnensysteme kolonialisiert hat und über fortgeschrittene Technologien verfügt, vor allem die, eine Persönlichkeit vollständig zu virtualisieren und so z.B. von einem in einen anderen Körper zu übertragen. Man verdankt einen Großteil des Fortschritts den leicht benutzbaren, aber kaum verstandenen Technologien einer längst verschwundenen, entwicklungstechnisch um Jahrtausende fortgeschrittenen Rasse, die bei einer Marsexpedition entdeckt wurde und dank derer Karten die besiedelbaren Planeten einst überhaupt gefunden wurden. So oder so - die Menschheit hat sich im Kern nicht verändert. Es wird die gleiche Art von Kriegen geführt, die schon immer die Erde verwüsteten - vordergründig um Ideologien oder religiöse Überzeugungen oder gesellschaftliche Ideale, hinter denen doch nur handfeste wirtschaftliche Interessen stehen. Nur die Kriegstechnik ist fortgeschritten. Der Held des Buches ist Takeshi Kovacs, ein Ex-Envoy, ehemaliger Elitesoldat einer Einheit, die als eine Art UN-Eingreiftruppe überall dort brutal und schnell zuschlägt, wo die übergreifende Regierung, das 'Protektorat', ihre Interessen gefährdet sieht. Doch nach einem traumatischen Einsatz hat er diese Zeit hinter sich gelassen und dient nun als Söldner in einem weiteren, irrwitzigen Krieg - bis er das Angebot erhält, sich an einer Expedition zu beteiligen, die ihn zu einem reichen Mann machen und ihm auf einen Schlag die Rückkehr in zivilisiertere Regionen ermöglichen könnte: Die Sicherung einer archäologischen Sensation, eines unschätzbar wertvollen technologischen Artefakts, für das jede der mächtigen Konzerne, die hinter dem Krieg stehen, ein Vermögen zahlen würde. Doch es gibt noch andere, die an dem Artefakt interessiert sind und die Expedition gerät zu einem Disaster, das alle Kriegsgräuel harmlos erscheinen lässt... Das Faszinierende an Richard Morgans Büchern ist es, dass es ihm gelingt, eine unfassbar spannende, adrenalingeladene Handlung voller Action, tief greifender Emotionen und der richtigen Position zynischem Humor zu kombinieren mit unfassbar lebendigen und unvorhersehbaren Charakteren, einer sehr gut durchdachten Welt voll faszinierender technologischer Denkspiele und einem politisch-gesellschaftlich-kulturellen Hintergrund, der es in sich hat und für sich allein schon Gänsehaut erzeugt - weil er so sehr die Spannungen unserer eigenen Welt reflektiert und jede Heuchelei gnadenlos ans Tageslicht zieht. 'Broken Angels' ist ein großartiger, rasanter Thriller, aber es ist auch eine Gesellschaftsstudie, ein Meisterstück des Spannungsaufbaus, eine fantasievolle aber zugleich großartig durchdachte Zukunftsstudie mit Technologien, die man sich sehr gut als logische Weiterentwicklung dessen vorstellen kann, was heute schon existiert. Ich denke, man kann guten Gewissens sagen, dass es im Bereich intelligenter SciFi-Thriller sehr wenig gibt, was an Richard Morgans Takeshi Kovacs Bücher herankommt, und 'Broken Angels' ist für mich wahrscheinlich der beste der drei Bände. Unbedingt lesen!
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