Yesterday afternoon I decided to take a break from the big pile o' library books to read "Altered Carbon" by Richard Morgan, one of the Swancon guests.
Last night at midnight, I finished it (and then had insomnia for unrelated reasons). As a result I am So Sleepy so this is just rambly thoughts.
Like "Devil in a Blue Dress" it's quite good noir, but more of the cyberpunk end (without the shallow flashyness of a lot of cyberpunk), which is more my genre. I really liked it, though as warned it's quite violent, has some somewhat skeevy attitudes towards women, and amazingly bad sex scenes. Someone needs to tell him the word "globes" is not sexy.
As with Iain M Banks I was not convinced by the attempts to undercut the intense straight-guy-ness in this seemingly gender-equal far future with stuff like vague references to gay/male prostitutes we never meet. For example, every single woman is hot, and a disproportionate number want to sleep with the main character. On the plus side he actually gets put in a female body for a while and seems less upset at it (in principle) than he was earlier at being put in a caucasian one(*), but then there were some creepy comments about the way women "feel touch differently to men". I guess if you're going to write all your female characters kind of the same you could do worse than making them all sensible, competent, and driven.
The world building was great, not mind bogglingly inventive but not in-your-face-expositiony either, just there as a believable and effective backdrop. Good mystery too, thus the up-till-midnight reading :)
I find myself interested in more of this world and this character, I'll have to go hunt some downand then horribly torture them and torch off their heads.
(*)The main character is ethnically japanese/eastern european, something which I felt was dealt with pretty well
Last night at midnight, I finished it (and then had insomnia for unrelated reasons). As a result I am So Sleepy so this is just rambly thoughts.
Like "Devil in a Blue Dress" it's quite good noir, but more of the cyberpunk end (without the shallow flashyness of a lot of cyberpunk), which is more my genre. I really liked it, though as warned it's quite violent, has some somewhat skeevy attitudes towards women, and amazingly bad sex scenes. Someone needs to tell him the word "globes" is not sexy.
As with Iain M Banks I was not convinced by the attempts to undercut the intense straight-guy-ness in this seemingly gender-equal far future with stuff like vague references to gay/male prostitutes we never meet. For example, every single woman is hot, and a disproportionate number want to sleep with the main character. On the plus side he actually gets put in a female body for a while and seems less upset at it (in principle) than he was earlier at being put in a caucasian one(*), but then there were some creepy comments about the way women "feel touch differently to men". I guess if you're going to write all your female characters kind of the same you could do worse than making them all sensible, competent, and driven.
The world building was great, not mind bogglingly inventive but not in-your-face-expositiony either, just there as a believable and effective backdrop. Good mystery too, thus the up-till-midnight reading :)
I find myself interested in more of this world and this character, I'll have to go hunt some down
(*)The main character is ethnically japanese/eastern european, something which I felt was dealt with pretty well
no subject
Altered Carbon is very firmly cyberpunk/film noir, Broken Angels is more sorta-SF-War/first contact-ish, and Woken Furies is a very interesting homecoming/revolution/sociology novel.
They continue to be quite violent, although not to the level that his latest two books, Black Man (Thirteen in the US,) and The Steel Remains. Those two, especially ..Steel.. are not for the squeamish.
Someone needs to tell him the word "globes" is not sexy.
So do so. You'll be at this year's Swancon, yes? I don't remember the sex scenes being especially bad, but then I tend to skim over sex scenes in all books 'cause they just don't interest me. *shrug*
no subject
no subject
I'm pretty keen to see how RM mixes it up with the sisterhood at Swancon. Just because he writes a certain way doesn't make him necessarily that way inclined in person. I've met some pretty shy and fluffy horror writers :-)
no subject