Broken Angels 104
Broken Angels | |
author | Richard Morgan |
pages | 484 |
publisher | Gollancz |
rating | 8 |
reviewer | Motor |
ISBN | 0575075503 |
summary | Violent, gory and intelligent hard SF |
First, a little background on the universe of Broken Angel. A few hundred years before the events in Altered Carbon, humanity discovers the technological remains of a space-faring species on Mars -- and naturally nicknames them Martians, even though it is clear Mars is not their home planet, just a colony. After decoding some of their technology and information, humanity begins moving out to the various worlds detailed in the Martian records.
The other big technological breakthrough is the ability to record a person's mind via a cortical stack implanted in the spine. This effectively abolishes death through injury or disease, as the stack can be recovered and the data stored -- and even downloaded into a new body, or 'sleeve.' It also makes Real Death, or the destruction of someone's cortical stack, a much more serious crime than mere organic damage.
Far from creating a technological utopia of plenty for everyone this tech-breakthrough, diaspora and near-freedom from death, leads to more revolutions, more killing, and more varied inventive ways of brutalising each other. New bodies, or sleeves, cost money and most people are unable to afford them, and are consequently kept "on stack." Raw, unfettered captialism is the way. Criminal behaviour gets you stacked for a number of years, and your body handed over to someone else. It also opens the way to such charming practises as virtual torture, with no hope of escape or death.
Takeshi Kovacs, born on the Harlan's World colony, is a former member of the Envoy Corps. A military branch that 'conditions' its members, effectively rewriting their personalities to make them better soldiers. The Envoy Corps are the most feared soliders of the Protectorate. The conditioning gives them iron emotional control, a lack of empathy, extra combat awareness, and skill at psychologically manipulating others. They also possess the ability to deal with being quickly and frequently re-sleeved when deployed into a combat situation via needlecast (a kind of hyperspace communication system) -- something that can, apparently, be quite traumatic for normal people.
Altered Carbon covered (in flashback) some of Kovacs' background story, and the reasons for his disillusionment and desertion from the Envoys; Broken Angels continues his story. After the events in Altered Carbon, Kovacs finds himself signed up to fight in a mercenary unit -- known as 'The Wedge' -- on the colony world of Sanction IV. Former Envoys are highly prized by commanders, and despite his distaste of command and responsibility, it pays the bills.
After being injured in a battle, Kovacs is approached by another soldier to get involved with the unofficial find of a Martian artifact ... one of the most extraordinary and potentially lucrative yet found. It's a race to claim ownership, against other ruthless corporations, betrayal, slow sleeve death due to radiation sickness (the Mandrake corporation engineers the nuking of a nearby city, just to clear out the area), and killer nanotechnology.
Like Altered Carbon, Broken Angels is a brutal read in parts. It doesn't flinch from the horrific things people do to each other, and is spectacularly inventive in thinking up ever more horrendous methods of punishment and interrogation. It throws in voodoo, 'soul markets' where dead soliders' stacks are sold, and an anatomiser -- a machine designed for a horrible ritual punishment in The Wedge.
While I enjoyed Altered Carbon, I thought it almost too much of a teenage-boy fantasy novel: An almost unstoppable bad-ass who can deal with anything, but is basically a good guy at heart; the almost fetishistic descriptions of weapons and gleefully detailed battles and brawls. It's all good stuff; well written and inventive, but a bit limited (except for the Jimmy de Soto hallucinations, which I thought were excellent). It was saved by its imaginative technology, hard SF speculation and clever detective story twists. Broken Angels seems a bit more mature. There is still the gleeful descriptions of battles, but the surrounding characters seem more fleshed out. 'Broken Angels' is no character-driven, emotionally deep masterpiece -- but it is a page-turner which neatly combines fast-paced action, imaginative technology and plot twists.
A quick note for any British readers who remember when the Conservatives (the traditional party of the Right) were in power: In the novel, the current whiney political officer of Kovacs' Wedge unit is called Lamont (he's been deliberately addicted to wire to keep him quiet), and the previous one was Portillo (he was regularly beaten, also to keep him quiet). It's a safe bet that Morgan is not a card-carrying member of the Conservative Party.
You can purchase Broken Angels from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews. To see your own review here, carefully read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Nothing for you to see here. Please move along. (Score:1)
Seriously, that's what it said before the link was fixed.
Sounds Like... (Score:3, Interesting)
The whole "cortical stack" thing sounds like the Endimion portion of Dan Simmons' "Hyperion/Endimion" cycle of books. Although, from the sounds of it, this doesn't go off on the same religious bent.
Does anybody who's read Simmons' stuff and the reviews book care to comment? If you liked Hyperion and liked the reviewed books as well, was it because of similarities?
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
I didn't mean to imply a "rip". More like a story with some similar themes.
From what everybody's saying, the only similarity is humans who can "live" a really long time; one via actual resurrection, the other via memory download.
It seems like most people liked the book, so I'll have to go and pick up a copy.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:3, Interesting)
It's similar to, but not really a Carbon copy of, "Voice of the Whirlwind" by Walter Jon Williams.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:5, Interesting)
That's about all there is for similarities though. I consider RM's writing to be sci-fi noir, a style I really like and one that very few authors have managed to do well.
Be sure to goto Richard Morgan's website [richardkmorgan.co.uk] and send him an email. He responded quickly to mine and must read all his fan mail.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
Cool. That's one of the things I liked most about the Hyperion series. Although, having to read through the second book to appreciate the first was a bit of a drag.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:4, Informative)
While its not an absolute necessity to enjoy Broken Angels, I think that it will add just that little bit extra to enjoying it. There are some small references in BA to events in Altered Carbon and you will more quickly understand why things are they way they are in BA.
That said Altered Carbon and Broken Angels are some of the best reads I've had recently and I have no trouble recommending both of them without hesitation. Richard Morgans third novel, just released, Market Forces was quite a bit of a turn from what he wrote before (in some senses that is) but I enjoyed it. Not as much as as AC and BA but still a good read. I won't say much more because I don't want to spoil it.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
Good to know. That's the way I normally work with books in a loose series about the central character.
I find it kind of annoying to read a book and miss all of the references to similar situations in prior books.
Thanks for the info; I'm hitting Borders tonig
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:1)
"Here's a dozen disjointed, over-long stories, tied together by an ambiguous and too-short ending. Thanks for your time."
I just really didn't get it...
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:1)
Fair enough. : )
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:4, Insightful)
After reading Hyperion, I had a similar impression. I liked the writing, but felt that the ending was a bit rushed for my taste. It was good reading, but nothing spectacular, I thought. I had bought all four books (Hyperion, Fall of Hyperion, Endimion, and Rise of Endimion), so I decided to continue and read the rest of the series.
I'm glad I did.
Hyperion, to me, seems to be more along the lines of The Real Story by Stephen R. Donaldson; it's kind of a set up for the entire cycle of books, rather than a stand-alone novel. While it does stand on its own, it does so more as a collection of similarly themed stories like I Robot.
The Fall of Hyperion finishes up the entire Hyperion tale and begins to explain a little of the Shrike mythology. As much as it wraps the Hyperion story up, it leaves tons of questions about what, exactly, is going on. Not so much that you're dissatisfied as a reader, but enough to make you wanting just a bit more.
Enter Endimion and Rise of Endimion, set 247 years after The Fall of Hyperion. These stories, in concert, wrap up every single loose end left over from Hyperion and leaves only one unanswered question in the last paragraph.
Of all the Sci-Fi I've read, I've never read a story that used time travel so effectively.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:1)
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:3, Informative)
Well, actually, both books do touch on this. There is a religion (can't remember the name - I read the books over a year ago) that believes that the process of downloading to a cortical stack leaves the soul behind and it is therefore something to be avoided. I thought it was more like the Jehovah's Witness prohibition against receiving blood transfusions than Catholism's view of contraception though.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
Good to know. I tend to like stories that get into a bit of religion, pointing out the discrepancies between theological and actual actions.
Thanks for the info.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh don't worry I think I remember!
Ok, flame retardent suit? check. Comments taken out of context nullifer? check. Atheist mode still activated? check.
In Altered Carbon the obscure religion opposed to the cortical stacks was: The Catholic church, or what actually remained of it at the time.
Since everyone has a stack in this future scenario, those that were Catholic opposed themselves being placed into another sleeve (aka body) for what was effectivly being brought back to life, if their stack wasn't destroyed aka real death (RD). As apposed to those with sleeve insurance policies, who didn't mind getting another chance.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:1)
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:2)
I've read this one almost as many times as Ender's Game. :)
I think I drew the correlation to Hyperion because I finished reading the series a couple of days ago. It's been at least a month since I've read the Reality Dysfunction series.
Man, this thread went wild! I was hoping for some more reading material, but the responses have supplied far more than I ever though I'd get.
Re:Sounds Like... (Score:1)
In Related News (Score:1, Interesting)
Do you think Gollancz is going to take issue with the cybersquatter owners of brokenangels.com [brokenangels.com]?
Re:In Related News (Score:2)
Re:My god... (Score:2)
Those Linux d00dz play hardball! (Score:3, Funny)
Well, that's one surefire way of putting this Darl McBride / SCOX scam to rest permanently. Someone explain to me where the problem is?
I liked Altered Carbon (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmmmm (Score:1)
It was a good story but.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Bugged me.
Other than that, a fun novel.
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:2)
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:2)
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:1)
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:2)
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh. My god. Does he have. A Kirk Fetish? Please tell. Me I must. Know!
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:1)
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:1)
my distant opinion is that the movie rights he sold (for usd 1m) may have effected his edge.
- p
Re:It was a good story but.... (Score:2)
blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:1)
Please can all you sci-fi fans please suggest your favourite 3 books of that genre. With a tilt towards the soft of book you think someone who likes fiction and science but has read only a little sci-fi. I've heard about 'hard sci-fi' and it sounds interesting. I don't mind if it's pretty weird.
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:2)
A Fire Upon the Deep and A Deepness in the Sky, by Vernor Vinge. I'd recommend the second over the first for you. It's great sci-fi, great characters, and a little weird but fascinating.
Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson. Amazing.
I'll go a little ways back here and recommend The Time Machine or War of the Worlds, HG Wells. Fantastic must-read for any real SF fan.
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:2, Interesting)
I'll check them out on Amazon shortly.
>Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson. Amazing.
Huh - I typed, then deleted, a comment about that being pretty much the only current sci-fi book I'd read, and I thought that it was pretty good but a touch overrated by people online, to be honest. A slight anti-climax. I didn't like all that religious stuff, but I did like the atmosphere he managed to create - like a stylised cartoon (The Powerpuff Girl
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't normally pimp my site in a comment, but you might want to bookmark my new review site (as seen in my sig) so that you can find more sci-fi books. The initial group I have is very sci-fi friendly.
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:2)
Start with Ambient. It's hard to read, since it's in futurespeak, but kind of a disturbing messed-up cyberpunk dystopian adventure.
Imagine Burgess' A Clockwork Orange crossed with Gibson's Neuromancer, some assorted Raymond Chandler, and perhaps a quick Doom III session, and you'll end up in something not unlike Ambient. Well, you may need to take some methamphetamines and huff some spraypaint in a circus sideshow first, but you'll get there eventua
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:1)
Re:blatant thread-jacking,but (Score:1, Troll)
A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge
The Uplift War series by David Brin
The Gap Into series by Stephen R. Donaldson
Snow Crash or The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson
OK, that's not three. Sorry.
Takeshi Kovacs (Score:2)
Re:Takeshi Kovacs (Score:2)
Ever since Altered Carbon (Score:1)
I just want him to write more.
Re:Ever since Altered Carbon (Score:1)
Is this religious literature? (Score:3, Interesting)
So I bought "Market forces" -- and have never been so disappointed in my life.
It was like religious writing from the Bible belt with Chomsky as Jesus. Where idealism and propaganda go in not only reason and integrity go out -- but also fun and interesting literature. :-(
When you write the above aboue "Broken Angels", does it mean this book has also been seduced by the author's political opinions to write about conspiracy theories about why the present society is just a capitalist stalinism?
(No, I'm not a fanatic -- I really like most of MacLeod's books, for instance. I just have a dislike like for Believers, no matter the religion.)
Re:Is this religious literature? (Score:3, Informative)
When you write the above aboue "Broken Angels", does it mean this book has also been seduced by the author's political opinions to write about conspiracy theories about why the present society is just a capitalist stalinism?
Disclaimer: I haven't read Market Forces. But Broken Angels isn't (or doesn't seem to me to be) thinly veiled allegory or anything like that. There are places where Morgan's views on war leak in, but there's no preaching. The reason I mentioned the Conservative party was just because
Re:Is this religious literature? (Score:2)
Altered Carbon was more detective story than scifi (Score:4, Interesting)
For a much better scifi work, with a lot of though t provoking concepts, check out "Permutation City" by Greg Egan. He has a similar concept of taking human consciousness into an electronic form. But, Egan covers it much more thoroughly.
Old News? (Score:1)
For my two penneth - Broken Angels wasn't as good as the first, but an enjoyable change none the less.
Richard Morgan (Score:1)
Peter F Hamilton (Score:2)
Re:Peter F Hamilton (Score:2)
No, no, no, no. No. No! Never, ever, read "Misspent Youth" - it is dreadful.
The rest are good to excellent (although "The Naked God" was a bit of a poor ending to the great series).
only one tiny gripe (Score:3, Insightful)
I found it interesting, and somehow disappointing, that the premise of this story relies on the "needlecast", which is just this author's renaming of the ansible, which is Ursule K. le Guin's/Orson Scott Card's method of transmitting data faster than light throughout the universe. With it, a digitized person can be transmitted from one colonized system to another instantaneously; without it, space travel is hardly improved.
Why is this a problem for me? I don't know, exactly. Ansibles are no more or less possible (based on known science) than digitizing the entire human mind. Maybe I just don't like my sci-fi to assume more than one impossible thing at a time.
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, digitizing the human mind, that's a hornets nest. Since we still can't really pin down what consciousness is or how it emerges, just downloading and uploading a cognitive state is pretty scary, and frankly, beyond the realm of possibility at this time.
But thats just the way I see it, IMO.
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
Things at the quantum level really don't make intuitive sense.
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
Basically what happens is that no matter what, if you're observing the "remote" end of the entanglement, you will get apparently random gibberish that requires additional context, transferred over classical channels from the "sender", to interpret meaningfully.
digitizing consciousness (Score:1)
Re:only one tiny gripe (Score:2)
I read both... (Score:3, Informative)
The Mandrake Corporation nuking a city? (Score:4, Funny)
Good books but more to come? (Score:1)
However I feel the author is painting a bigger canvas than these two books. If you read both the books together you can see interesting themes developing (as one poster said the Martians, but I don't want to drop any spoilers).
I'm hoping for much more out of a series of related books - thats always my favourite when the series adds up to mor
Re:Good books but more to come? (Score:4, Interesting)
Despite the type of character Takeshi Kovacs is, I can help but like him, but really thats what anti-hereos are about, we relate to them because they get to do the things that we would like to do in similar situations. Takeshi is certainly not forgiving when he is wronged, but we feel sympathy towards him because of the hardships he has had to endure, even those he has brought onto himself.
addicted to wire? (Score:1)
Re:addicted to wire? (Score:1)
Hope that helps.
Squeee! (Score:3, Informative)
Fair warning for folks interested in the series though: The torture scenes get gruesome, almost to the point of Piers Anthony's "On The Uses Of Torture" short story.
Being body-swapped into the body of a young woman, on her period, and then being tied down and having your feet slowly blowtorched off.
Yeah. Reader beware. If you can tolerate the gruesome scenes, however, the book is excellent. And from the sounds of it, so is the sequel.
Re:Squeee! (Score:1)
I will also add that both books have at least one fairly extended and graphic sex scene of the sort I feel I have to close if I am sitting too close to other folks on the work transit shuttle.
I'm a prude, I know.
In any case, let's hope he doesn't get so bogged down in comic book scripts and screenplays that he never actually gets to write another novel.
Re:Squeee! (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone else concerned about how modern multimedia are unconsciously shaping (degrading?) our frameworks? Sequels to books are "written", not "made". I'm sure this isn't true, but it sounds like the poster can't even conceive of a mode of entertainment fundamentally different from TeeVee or talkies.
What's more, clearly the book is finished, so it's not even being written anymore -- being "made" is doubly wrong. At best you could say it's being published. (But I suspect in fact one would see that it's being "released"...)
Sorry. It's late and I've been on a plane most of the day; I guess my gripe gremlin is acting up...
Re:Squeee! (Score:1)
One could say that the book was being made if it referred to the printing and binding process...
Re:Squeee! (Score:1)
I'm well aware I could have used better words than "made", but at the time, it wasn't exactly a priority. Nor is it now.
And as for parent's post about being unable to conceive beyond "Teevee"... christ. I don't even own a television. Reading is my primary source of entertainment.
Re:Squeee! (Score:2)
I think the posters point was that it is intersting that this word was used in such a setting -- almost unconsciencly. It *might* go to show how pervasive entertainment being "Made" is in o
Market Forces (Score:2)
It's set in a different universe to his first two... a post-apocalyptic England mainly.
When I picked it up, I was quite concerned that it was going to be a straight rip off of Mad Max, but it kept me interested all the way through.
Hell, how can any book that starts off with a quote from a Midnight Oil song NOT be good
Re:Market Forces (Score:2, Interesting)
It's not a different universe, just set several hundred years before. Market Forces mentions the fact that humans have reached Mars, implying that they haven't yet found the alien technology.
The development of the corporations (as a result of a series of 'domino' recessions rather than a post-apocalyptic event) seems to be the precursor to the corporations within his first two books. Even at the earlier time of Market Forces the corporations are wielding considerable power and openly manipulating govern
Quality of writing (Score:1)
I Think of 'Feersum Endjin' (Score:1)
Re:I Think of 'Feersum Endjin' (Score:2)
That said, I do so love his Culture books (pretty much everything by Iain _M_ Banks, except for Feersum Endjin). I've got a bunch of sigquotes that came out of those books. I love the "I can wipe out starsystems but still play practical jokes on my crew" AIs.
His Iaim Banks (no 'M') stuff is a lot more variable. I dug The Wasp Factory pretty much, and
a Song of Stone wasn't
Takeshi is...scary. (Score:3, Interesting)
Envoy programming? Aftereffects of being in combat for a long time? Not sure.
Sophmore Slump (Score:1)
noir [nt] (Score:1)
Good Review (Score:1)
Interesting but violence/torture fetish gets old (Score:2)
1) justify massive amounts of violence on the part of the protagonists as a reasonable retaliation (a tacky d
Altered Carbon was dreadful (Score:1)
First of all, it barely qualifies as scifi. It's more of a bad Hollywood (option-me-please!) mystery thriller with tacked-on, unoriginal science fiction elements. A lot of the dialog is so awkward that I was literally cringing while reading it.
The only thing I got out of Altered Carbon was a strong desire to avoid any of the author's other work.
lol (Score:1)
takeshi is a japanese name
kovacs is hungarian
this information is not important tho
Manipulatives *are* empaths! (Score:2)
conditioning gives them iron emotional control, a lack of empathy, extra combat awareness, and skill at psychologically manipulating others
Both highlighted assertions are mutually incompatible.