It's hard to say whether what I read in Altered Carbon is so break-out, so edgy, so unique that it's sci-fi crime noir at its finest and most radical ... or if what I read was just a hot, scrambled mess of roughly formed pop-culture ideas shoved alongside regurgitated classic sci-fi elements and presented as something new. I'm not exactly a literary scholar, so if some well-respected authors and some dusty professors told me Altered Carbon represented one of the finest achievements in noir sci-fi in the 21st Century, I'd take their word for it. But seeing as how this was published in 2003, and 13 years later has yet to have a movie or TV show made from it ... I'm going to lean away from that possibility.
The problem is that at any given moment when reading this somewhat bloated novel, I either loved it and found it gritty and dark and compelling, or overly self-assured, vague, meandering and unnecessarily graphic. Altered Carbon presents a future that draws heavy inspiration from sources like Blade Runner and any number of other late 20th century noir sci-fi sources. It models itself after those classic 1950s crime movies / shows with the smoky voiced detectives and alluring lasses and unrepentant criminals. It spins a future of imaginative proportions and interesting ideas, yet never really seems to fully explore any of them, let alone EXPLAIN half of them. It's uncompromising, to be sure, but at some point I wondered if the author was being graphic and grotesque just for shock value and not necessarily to illustrate any point (this would be one of those areas where I can't tell if the novel is brilliant or just crude). Ultimately, I felt like Altered Carbon was a collection of really good concepts that layered upon one another like a glorious cake of imagination, only to have the author give up halfway through, resulting in an unsatisfyingly half-baked creation.
More to the point ... this novel is basically your classic "anti-hero gets recruited by powerful strangers to investigate a crime the cops wrote off as something it's not, and anti-hero ends up getting into more than he bargained for, revealing some nasty truths about those he works with, as well as himself". There's certainly a lot of mystery, a lot of twists and turns, and not all of it because the novel was being clever; some of it is, in my opinion, is simply because the author failed to properly set some scenes or elaborate on the protagonists thought processes. This novel takes place about 500 years into the future, so naturally, a lot of things are different. And while there's much praise to be given to creative works that just dive in and drop you amidst a world of pure sci-fi imagination, it's also prudent to provide clear exposition if you're going to put your story this far into the future. The author uses a grotesque amount of jargon and slang, and never clearly or fully explains all of it (though he does make at least 50 to 60% of it, and most of the important bits, clear). On the one hand, this makes Future Earth feel organic and real, but on the other hand, it meant I couldn't understand half of what the characters would be saying in some select scenes.
The core of the story is intriguing, imaginative, mysterious and certainly makes full use of fiction that the author creates, while still relying upon some timeless plot devices to pull it back down to our reality. While I didn't get all of the insinuations regarding the central story or character motivations, I'll chalk this up to my own literary failings ... for the most part. But about half-way through this novel, after the author had already thrown out a hundred ideas about this sci-fi universe, I started to wonder if he was just throwing out ideas for the hell of it and not because he was being clever or coherent. There was vague mentions of there being evidence of Martian aliens; there were AIs; there was androids, or humans masquerading as androids (I could never be sure); there were flying cars; there was anti-gravity generators; there was FTL communications; there was virtual reality; there was genetically engineered and grown human bodies; there was cybernetic enhancements ... and this is just the easy to relate stuff, and doesn't even touch on the core ideas that build the story, that actually worked.
To be sure, the central premise, that of human minds being backed-up in surgically implanted data cores (called cortical stacks in the neck) was imaginative and original. From this, the author spins a whole series of ideas, most of which are compelling and intelligent. Rather than physical prison or rehabilitation, convicted criminals get their minds taken out and put in "storage" for a number of years. "Real Death" is rare, and only happens if someone's implant is physically destroyed or corrupted; upon death, all but the poor are uploaded into a new "sleeve" (as they call the human body now). There's exploration about how the rich have multiple bodies they swap between, how they can use genetically cultured and vat grown super-human forms, there's some exploration about the issue of telling who is who when a mind can be moved between bodies so easily. There's a plethora of rich and imaginative ideas, too many for me to list here, and most of them are intelligent and work, and several of them set the framework for the central plot conflict. And for the most part, the author follows the "rules" he creates for this sci-fi. That said, probably a good quarter or more of these ideas are spoken of, then discarded and barely touched again, despite how interesting some of them were. In addition, few of the characters really wonder about or explore some of the more lofty concepts, which would have been nice. Given, this is a future that everyone has been living in for centuries and is used to, but the reader hasn't. Occasionally, one of these ideas will be more completely mulled over, such as how Catholics are bucking against the idea of continuous reincarnation through the implants everyone is required to have. And since this is a crime noir story, there's a lot of play with ideas of the future judicial system. And yet, I never felt like any of this was explored to a point of satisfaction.
Wrapping up here, I do also want to touch on the rather explicit nature of this book I mentioned. While I'm no prude, I think it bears mentioning that this novel has two substantive scenes of pornographic detail (like, literally, nothing is left to innuendo or insinuation). The scenes do serve to forward two different plot devices, especially the second one (it's hard to explain, but trust me, it's not there just for the voyeuristic), but all the same, they come as a shock. Counterbalancing this, the author also throws in a grotesque and disturbing torture sequence (made even worse by the unique ideas in this novel). And during the final few chapters and the final climatic scenes, there's some more gruesomeness in both violence and sexual depravity that might churn some stomachs. In general, this story takes an uncompromising look at the worst elements of humanity as framed within the context of a sci-fi future 500 years from now. Since death means less than it used to, violence tends to be casual and unflinching. Empathy is sorely lacking in many characters. Privacy is a thing reserved for the rich. There's some rather nuanced and intelligent exploration of the ideas behind the human body now just being a "sleeve", with the same emotional attachment to an individual as a prized car, so you can imagine that this creates some uncomfortable realities. Collectively, this unflinching approach to a dark future of prevalent and uncensored violence, crime, sex and moral failings forms another of the "is it really clever or just really crude" problems I have with this novel.
So ... the long and short of it is: it's a toss up. Depending upon your tolerance for hard sci-fi and explicit sex and violence and over-use of slang and jargon in a barely relatable future, driven by a crime noir story line ... you might either love or hate this novel. In my case, I'm just kind of lukewarm about it, and glad I finished it. I might eventually cave and read the next book ... I see this is a premier novel, and since many of the ideas were good, if not fully realized, I wonder if the sequel might refine the style a bit. I would be interested to see this as a movie or TV show (the last pages claims it has been optioned for Hollywood and IMDb shows a barely filled entry for "Altered Carbon" with no date).
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Altered Carbon (Netflix Series Tie-in Edition) (Takeshi Kovacs) Paperback – February 13, 2018
by
Richard K. Morgan
(Author)
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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • NOW AN EXCITING SERIES FROM NETFLIX • The shell that blew a hole in his chest was only the beginning in this “tour de force of genre-bending, a brilliantly realized exercise in science fiction.”—The New York Times Book Review
In the twenty-fifth century, humankind has spread throughout the galaxy, monitored by the watchful eye of the U.N. While divisions in race, religion, and class still exist, advances in technology have redefined life itself. Now, assuming one can afford the expensive procedure, a person’s consciousness can be stored in a cortical stack at the base of the brain and easily downloaded into a new body (or “sleeve”) making death nothing more than a minor blip on a screen.
Ex-U.N. envoy Takeshi Kovacs has been killed before, but his last death was particularly painful. Dispatched one hundred eighty light-years from home, re-sleeved into a body in Bay City (formerly San Francisco, now with a rusted, dilapidated Golden Gate Bridge), Kovacs is thrown into the dark heart of a shady, far-reaching conspiracy that is vicious even by the standards of a society that treats “existence” as something that can be bought and sold.
In the twenty-fifth century, humankind has spread throughout the galaxy, monitored by the watchful eye of the U.N. While divisions in race, religion, and class still exist, advances in technology have redefined life itself. Now, assuming one can afford the expensive procedure, a person’s consciousness can be stored in a cortical stack at the base of the brain and easily downloaded into a new body (or “sleeve”) making death nothing more than a minor blip on a screen.
Ex-U.N. envoy Takeshi Kovacs has been killed before, but his last death was particularly painful. Dispatched one hundred eighty light-years from home, re-sleeved into a body in Bay City (formerly San Francisco, now with a rusted, dilapidated Golden Gate Bridge), Kovacs is thrown into the dark heart of a shady, far-reaching conspiracy that is vicious even by the standards of a society that treats “existence” as something that can be bought and sold.
- Print length512 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDel Rey
- Publication dateFebruary 13, 2018
- Dimensions5.49 x 1.08 x 8.17 inches
- ISBN-101524798819
- ISBN-13978-1524798819
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Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2016
Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2020
Altered Carbon (AC) is a science fiction presented by author Richard Morgan in the hardboiled genre. With the protagonist narrating the story in the first voice, it was like reading a Raymond Chandler detective fiction with a science fiction spin to it.
It has familiar elements we would expect from hardboiled fictions, like gangsters, violence, torture, cops, whorehouses, low life, heroes, victims and selfless gallantry etc. Nevertheless, Morgan’s dystopian world has ageless core elements of humanity and virtues we are familiar with. Earth in the futuristic world of AC has also, the UN council and the rule of law governing it. People fear death and craved longevity beyond the normal lifespan and eternal youth. AC's humans, male and female, have insatiable lust for sex. A Christian religion forbidding the extension of life after the subject suffers permanent organic damage (death). A corrupted and class-divided society where the rich and powerful elites have more options at their disposals than the non-rich. In addition and not in the least is the basic human need to love and or loved by someone was played out by the major characters. Such familiarities helped me, a reader in the 21st century, connect with AC. Author Richard Morgan used uncanny intelligence, wittiness, humorous stereotypes, one-liner quips and sharp retorts in dialogues or narration by Takeshi, our hero, to convey AC's rich and the fascinating core theme of our intrepid hero would solve the whodunit mystery and unveiling the motives behind it. Exhibits of human vanity and the sad lives of the elites who have lived 300 centuries and beyond further enriched AC make the reader ponder about prospect of living forever may bring more pain than joy. Ultimately, the audience was not short-changed of a triumphant climax of the small people outsmarting and violently turning the tables on the rich and powerful immortal elites.
Language wise, there were neither long convoluted sentences nor heavy chapters with too many pages and certainly no redundancy. With the brevity of words and compactness of plot, the author conveyed his tale powerfully with colourful descriptions of the myriad of characters, which irresistibly tickled and amused me all the way.
Like most novels, especially sci-fi genre, the reader must learn new jargon for technology and acronyms. Thankfully, Kindle has the x-ray function, which is very useful for cross-checking unfamiliar terms, names and locations. The landscape of San Francisco Bay have evolved into a dystopian world of flying vehicles and blinding neon lights, holographic virtual reality of oversized humans, not unlike the world of Rick Deckard in Blade Runner. However, SF Bridge in red have survived and the frequent rain were helpful in linking readers to the beautiful wet and windy SF we know today.
Interestingly in AC, humans have already colonized many habitable planets light years away from mother earth. Interstellar travel light years apart was unimaginably easy and quick since it was possible to digitize the entire human psychic and soul for rapid transmission through space electronically. Very Star Trek like indeed. Back to reality, colonizing other habitable planets (if there are indeed others besides earth) cannot be more pressing today with the alarming deterioration of mother earth by the day. Even in the unlikely chance that we discover another habitable planet sometime in the future, and we have the technology to build a mother ship to take us there, the privileged rich and powerful, like in AC, will always be in front of the queue for a place in the mother ship.
It has familiar elements we would expect from hardboiled fictions, like gangsters, violence, torture, cops, whorehouses, low life, heroes, victims and selfless gallantry etc. Nevertheless, Morgan’s dystopian world has ageless core elements of humanity and virtues we are familiar with. Earth in the futuristic world of AC has also, the UN council and the rule of law governing it. People fear death and craved longevity beyond the normal lifespan and eternal youth. AC's humans, male and female, have insatiable lust for sex. A Christian religion forbidding the extension of life after the subject suffers permanent organic damage (death). A corrupted and class-divided society where the rich and powerful elites have more options at their disposals than the non-rich. In addition and not in the least is the basic human need to love and or loved by someone was played out by the major characters. Such familiarities helped me, a reader in the 21st century, connect with AC. Author Richard Morgan used uncanny intelligence, wittiness, humorous stereotypes, one-liner quips and sharp retorts in dialogues or narration by Takeshi, our hero, to convey AC's rich and the fascinating core theme of our intrepid hero would solve the whodunit mystery and unveiling the motives behind it. Exhibits of human vanity and the sad lives of the elites who have lived 300 centuries and beyond further enriched AC make the reader ponder about prospect of living forever may bring more pain than joy. Ultimately, the audience was not short-changed of a triumphant climax of the small people outsmarting and violently turning the tables on the rich and powerful immortal elites.
Language wise, there were neither long convoluted sentences nor heavy chapters with too many pages and certainly no redundancy. With the brevity of words and compactness of plot, the author conveyed his tale powerfully with colourful descriptions of the myriad of characters, which irresistibly tickled and amused me all the way.
Like most novels, especially sci-fi genre, the reader must learn new jargon for technology and acronyms. Thankfully, Kindle has the x-ray function, which is very useful for cross-checking unfamiliar terms, names and locations. The landscape of San Francisco Bay have evolved into a dystopian world of flying vehicles and blinding neon lights, holographic virtual reality of oversized humans, not unlike the world of Rick Deckard in Blade Runner. However, SF Bridge in red have survived and the frequent rain were helpful in linking readers to the beautiful wet and windy SF we know today.
Interestingly in AC, humans have already colonized many habitable planets light years away from mother earth. Interstellar travel light years apart was unimaginably easy and quick since it was possible to digitize the entire human psychic and soul for rapid transmission through space electronically. Very Star Trek like indeed. Back to reality, colonizing other habitable planets (if there are indeed others besides earth) cannot be more pressing today with the alarming deterioration of mother earth by the day. Even in the unlikely chance that we discover another habitable planet sometime in the future, and we have the technology to build a mother ship to take us there, the privileged rich and powerful, like in AC, will always be in front of the queue for a place in the mother ship.
Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2023
I enjoyed the movie. The book, however, is by far superior.
Exciting adventure intrigue with quite a bit of humor and excellent sci-fi world building and character development.
Brings up some interesting ethical philosophical questions, if you care to pay attention.
R for violence and sexual content. Mild language. Much of the violence is downplayed as not "real death" but it is pretty graphic nonetheless. Themes include murder, murder for hire, suicide, torture, psychological manipulation, and sexual deviance including virtual and physical snuff experiences.
Exciting adventure intrigue with quite a bit of humor and excellent sci-fi world building and character development.
Brings up some interesting ethical philosophical questions, if you care to pay attention.
R for violence and sexual content. Mild language. Much of the violence is downplayed as not "real death" but it is pretty graphic nonetheless. Themes include murder, murder for hire, suicide, torture, psychological manipulation, and sexual deviance including virtual and physical snuff experiences.
Top reviews from other countries
Yash
5.0 out of 5 stars
What. A. Ride
Reviewed in India on November 9, 2021
I was going to spend some time and craft this review, hoping I could correctly represent the brilliance of my experience. And then I realised - I'm too excited and whatever I write will never live up to Altered Carbon.
I haven't watched the show. And I'm not a massive sci-fi buff. I belong to the 7th circle of hell that holds all the people who've never watched Blade Runner. But ever since the hype of Cyberpunk 2077, I've had an urge for neon lights and urban dissolution.
If (in your mind) you want to create a world of night city corruption and holographic lust - read Altered Carbon.
If you want to live through the eyes of a man whose will has been conditioned through centuries of war, yet whose heart is relentlessly romantic- read Altered Carbon.
If you want to live as:
Max Payne
The Darkness
Johnny Silverhand
live as complete old testament vengeance,
read Altered Carbon.
I can tell you the same things you’d probably read on the back of the book.
Based in a future where new bodies (or sleeves) can be worn as easily as clothing, a former UN military envoy (Takeshi Kovacs) is nonconsensually sleeved on 25th century Earth, hired to investigate the murder of the vampirically old Laurens Bancroft.
But beyond that,
it's a story about the little guy proving we deserve better than the contemptuous disdain of the upper class.
It's a story about a world where good people have to do bad things for good endings.
It's a story with incredible dialogue, characters, themes, and narration.
This is a story that will turn you into a page-eater. You'll keep going and you'll have to mentally remind yourself to slow down, flip back, and just taste every line, every word, again.
There's no good way to close such an emotive review. So I'm going to let the book do it for me. The following quotes are just a taste of the raw power, that was within those unassuming 400+ pages:
1)
‘The personal, as everyone’s so f*****G fond of saying, is political. So if some idiot politician, some power player, tries to execute policies that harm you or those you care about, TAKE IT PERSONALLY. Get angry. The Machinery of Justice will not serve you here - it is slow and cold, and it is theirs, hardware and soft-. Only the little people suffer at the hands of Justice; the creatures of power slide out from under with a wink and a grin. If you want justice, you will have to claw it from them. Make it PERSONAL. Do as much damage as you can. GET YOUR MESSAGE ACROSS. That way you stand a far better chance of being taken seriously next time. Of being considered dangerous. And make no mistake about this: being taken seriously, being considered dangerous marks the difference, the ONLY difference in their eyes, between players and little people. Players they will make deals with. Little people they liquidate. And time and again they cream your liquidation, your displacement, your torture and brutal execution with the ultimate insult that it’s just business, it’s politics, it’s the way of the world, it’s a tough life and that IT’S NOTHING PERSONAL. Well, f**k them. Make it personal.’ - Quellcrist Falconer
2)
‘When they ask how I died, tell them: still angry.’
- Takeshi Kovacs
3)
Irene: Why? Why are you doing this?
Takeshi: ‘Because I want there to be something clean at the end of all this. Something I can feel good about.’
For a moment she went on staring at me. Then she closed the small gap between us and flung her arms around me with a cry that sent the nearest gulls wheeling up off the sand in alarm. I felt a trickle of tears smeared onto the side of my face, but she was laughing at the same time. I folded my arms round her in return and held her. And for the moments that the embrace lasted, and a little while after, I felt as clean as the breeze coming in off the sea.
4)
Kristin: Go on thinking like that, nothing’ll ever change for you.
Takeshi: Kristin, nothing ever does change.
I jerked a thumb back at the crowd outside.
You’ll always have morons like that, swallowing belief patterns whole so they don’t have to think for themselves. You’ll always have people like Kawahara and the Bancrofts to push their buttons and cash in on the program. People like you to make sure the game runs smoothly and the rules don’t get broken too often. And when the Meths want to break the rules themselves, they’ll send people like Trepp and me to do it. That’s the truth, Kristin. It’s been the truth since I was born a hundred and fifty years ago and from what I read in the history books, it’s never been any different. Better get used to it.
I haven't watched the show. And I'm not a massive sci-fi buff. I belong to the 7th circle of hell that holds all the people who've never watched Blade Runner. But ever since the hype of Cyberpunk 2077, I've had an urge for neon lights and urban dissolution.
If (in your mind) you want to create a world of night city corruption and holographic lust - read Altered Carbon.
If you want to live through the eyes of a man whose will has been conditioned through centuries of war, yet whose heart is relentlessly romantic- read Altered Carbon.
If you want to live as:
Max Payne
The Darkness
Johnny Silverhand
live as complete old testament vengeance,
read Altered Carbon.
I can tell you the same things you’d probably read on the back of the book.
Based in a future where new bodies (or sleeves) can be worn as easily as clothing, a former UN military envoy (Takeshi Kovacs) is nonconsensually sleeved on 25th century Earth, hired to investigate the murder of the vampirically old Laurens Bancroft.
But beyond that,
it's a story about the little guy proving we deserve better than the contemptuous disdain of the upper class.
It's a story about a world where good people have to do bad things for good endings.
It's a story with incredible dialogue, characters, themes, and narration.
This is a story that will turn you into a page-eater. You'll keep going and you'll have to mentally remind yourself to slow down, flip back, and just taste every line, every word, again.
There's no good way to close such an emotive review. So I'm going to let the book do it for me. The following quotes are just a taste of the raw power, that was within those unassuming 400+ pages:
1)
‘The personal, as everyone’s so f*****G fond of saying, is political. So if some idiot politician, some power player, tries to execute policies that harm you or those you care about, TAKE IT PERSONALLY. Get angry. The Machinery of Justice will not serve you here - it is slow and cold, and it is theirs, hardware and soft-. Only the little people suffer at the hands of Justice; the creatures of power slide out from under with a wink and a grin. If you want justice, you will have to claw it from them. Make it PERSONAL. Do as much damage as you can. GET YOUR MESSAGE ACROSS. That way you stand a far better chance of being taken seriously next time. Of being considered dangerous. And make no mistake about this: being taken seriously, being considered dangerous marks the difference, the ONLY difference in their eyes, between players and little people. Players they will make deals with. Little people they liquidate. And time and again they cream your liquidation, your displacement, your torture and brutal execution with the ultimate insult that it’s just business, it’s politics, it’s the way of the world, it’s a tough life and that IT’S NOTHING PERSONAL. Well, f**k them. Make it personal.’ - Quellcrist Falconer
2)
‘When they ask how I died, tell them: still angry.’
- Takeshi Kovacs
3)
Irene: Why? Why are you doing this?
Takeshi: ‘Because I want there to be something clean at the end of all this. Something I can feel good about.’
For a moment she went on staring at me. Then she closed the small gap between us and flung her arms around me with a cry that sent the nearest gulls wheeling up off the sand in alarm. I felt a trickle of tears smeared onto the side of my face, but she was laughing at the same time. I folded my arms round her in return and held her. And for the moments that the embrace lasted, and a little while after, I felt as clean as the breeze coming in off the sea.
4)
Kristin: Go on thinking like that, nothing’ll ever change for you.
Takeshi: Kristin, nothing ever does change.
I jerked a thumb back at the crowd outside.
You’ll always have morons like that, swallowing belief patterns whole so they don’t have to think for themselves. You’ll always have people like Kawahara and the Bancrofts to push their buttons and cash in on the program. People like you to make sure the game runs smoothly and the rules don’t get broken too often. And when the Meths want to break the rules themselves, they’ll send people like Trepp and me to do it. That’s the truth, Kristin. It’s been the truth since I was born a hundred and fifty years ago and from what I read in the history books, it’s never been any different. Better get used to it.
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Connor Kinsella
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mind-bending future fun
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 27, 2018
Okay let’s get the big question out of the way: book or television series? Well I’m probably in the majority when I say: both. Do both, and don’t worry too much about which order. I took the ‘Netflix > Book’ option. Not for any reason other than ignorance. I watched the show, thoroughly enjoyed it and really enjoyed talking about it before I’d even realised it was based on a book.
But comparisons between the two are actually pretty meaningless. The main characters are the same. The general story arc is the same. And that’s about it. The TV show has plenty enough plot for a TV show but far too much for a book. The book has plenty enough going on for a book, but wouldn't sustain the vast epic Netflix pulled off so brilliantly. So it’s the same but different, but no less enjoyable for that.
This is a story (okay, the first of a trilogy of stories) where the big central idea is the extremely weird relationship between human cognition and physical form. Everyone’s entire mind backed up onto a sort of black box flight recorder. You can kill the body but one’s cortical stack may or may not be killed with it. You can end being stored for tens if not hundreds of years, or slipped into another body (‘sleeve’) to carry on as you were, albeit taking quite some time to recognise yourself in the mirror. And then there’s cloning, double-sleeving and backing up one’s stack onto a sort of orbiting DropBox for minds. Phew. But if the best sci-fi relied solely on mind-bending ideas we’d have classic stuff emerging from every time a few dopeheads got hold of some A-grade. What Morgan does is to draw a great cast of characters in and out of this future weirdness. In a society where humans can be sleeved in bodies of any gender, race, age or all points in-between there’s plenty of room to explore how this might work, and how it might not. There’s good people, bad people and lots of in-betweens.
But it’s in Takeshi Kovacs that Richard Morgan has managed to create perhaps the best anti-hero I can remember since Tony Soprano. He’s part damaged scumbag, part guardian angel. He is certainly (I can say with only a slight degree of embarrassment) someone I’d really like to be. Super intelligent, virtually invincible, utterly fearless and with a PhD in street smart even on a planet he’s never visited before. As a 54-year old with greying hair and generous waistline I’d take all of that even without the killer one-liners and slightly skewed moral compass, which always seems to point in the right direction albeit with a few twists and turns along the way. He’s a very human human being.
The book also has a much fuller exploration (compared with the Netflix show) of a future universe where human beings have colonised the galaxy and have some incredibly sophisticated tech at their disposal, and yet often live in poverty and despair. It’s not quite a pan-galactic Christmas Carol but the themes are definitely there: the rich and powerful dumping all over the poor even in a far-future we might have hoped could be egalitarian and right-on. Not according to Altered carbon it ain’t.
Negative points? There are a few. The sex scenes are neither frequent not gratuitous and are fundamental to the plot. But they’re written in the style of the grubby porn stories schoolboys used to pore over at the back of the bus, and then only when the pictures had got either too boring or a bit er, stained. Yes, pre-internet readers did used to bookmark the sexy bits in Jackie Collins or Harold Robbins, but even way back in 2002 books as good as this simply didn't need squelchy porn-lite.
And while other reviewers were thrilled by the numerous fight scenes, it was all I could do not to imagine the 60’s Batman TV show. If you can’t remember that far back, then ‘KAPOW!’ and ‘BIFF!’ should refresh the memory. Then again I’m speaking as a Star Wars fan who Fast Forwards at the merest hint of a light sabre. But the various firefights and fist fights aren't entirely gratuitous and do serve a function in propelling the plot and showing the reader how tough a tough guy Kovacs really is.
So there we go. Is Altered Carbon a work of 5-star literary genius? No. Is it an enjoyably mind-bending read with great characters and an interesting plot? Absolutely. Might even make a good TV show one day.
But comparisons between the two are actually pretty meaningless. The main characters are the same. The general story arc is the same. And that’s about it. The TV show has plenty enough plot for a TV show but far too much for a book. The book has plenty enough going on for a book, but wouldn't sustain the vast epic Netflix pulled off so brilliantly. So it’s the same but different, but no less enjoyable for that.
This is a story (okay, the first of a trilogy of stories) where the big central idea is the extremely weird relationship between human cognition and physical form. Everyone’s entire mind backed up onto a sort of black box flight recorder. You can kill the body but one’s cortical stack may or may not be killed with it. You can end being stored for tens if not hundreds of years, or slipped into another body (‘sleeve’) to carry on as you were, albeit taking quite some time to recognise yourself in the mirror. And then there’s cloning, double-sleeving and backing up one’s stack onto a sort of orbiting DropBox for minds. Phew. But if the best sci-fi relied solely on mind-bending ideas we’d have classic stuff emerging from every time a few dopeheads got hold of some A-grade. What Morgan does is to draw a great cast of characters in and out of this future weirdness. In a society where humans can be sleeved in bodies of any gender, race, age or all points in-between there’s plenty of room to explore how this might work, and how it might not. There’s good people, bad people and lots of in-betweens.
But it’s in Takeshi Kovacs that Richard Morgan has managed to create perhaps the best anti-hero I can remember since Tony Soprano. He’s part damaged scumbag, part guardian angel. He is certainly (I can say with only a slight degree of embarrassment) someone I’d really like to be. Super intelligent, virtually invincible, utterly fearless and with a PhD in street smart even on a planet he’s never visited before. As a 54-year old with greying hair and generous waistline I’d take all of that even without the killer one-liners and slightly skewed moral compass, which always seems to point in the right direction albeit with a few twists and turns along the way. He’s a very human human being.
The book also has a much fuller exploration (compared with the Netflix show) of a future universe where human beings have colonised the galaxy and have some incredibly sophisticated tech at their disposal, and yet often live in poverty and despair. It’s not quite a pan-galactic Christmas Carol but the themes are definitely there: the rich and powerful dumping all over the poor even in a far-future we might have hoped could be egalitarian and right-on. Not according to Altered carbon it ain’t.
Negative points? There are a few. The sex scenes are neither frequent not gratuitous and are fundamental to the plot. But they’re written in the style of the grubby porn stories schoolboys used to pore over at the back of the bus, and then only when the pictures had got either too boring or a bit er, stained. Yes, pre-internet readers did used to bookmark the sexy bits in Jackie Collins or Harold Robbins, but even way back in 2002 books as good as this simply didn't need squelchy porn-lite.
And while other reviewers were thrilled by the numerous fight scenes, it was all I could do not to imagine the 60’s Batman TV show. If you can’t remember that far back, then ‘KAPOW!’ and ‘BIFF!’ should refresh the memory. Then again I’m speaking as a Star Wars fan who Fast Forwards at the merest hint of a light sabre. But the various firefights and fist fights aren't entirely gratuitous and do serve a function in propelling the plot and showing the reader how tough a tough guy Kovacs really is.
So there we go. Is Altered Carbon a work of 5-star literary genius? No. Is it an enjoyably mind-bending read with great characters and an interesting plot? Absolutely. Might even make a good TV show one day.
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Atra
5.0 out of 5 stars
A justifiably award winning novel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 21, 2015
This is one of those books that I've been meaning to get around to reading for ages (having won the Philip K. Dick Award in 2003) and now that I've finished it I can't wait to read the second of Richard K. Morgan's trio of Takeshi Kovacs novels! Many people seem to link Neal Asher's Agent Cormac series with Morgan's Takeshi Kovacs, and I can sort of see why, but the quality of Moragn's prose and characterisation beats seven hells out of its contemporary (sorry Neal, I do still love the Cormac universe!)
Takeshi Kovacs is an arrogant sh*t. If you met him, you would most likely regret that day for the rest of your life (which might be terminally shortened henceforth.) He is violent, untrustworthy, impulsive, has very few - if any - morals and is utterly without any kind of personal boundaries. He is also a brilliantly realised and well written character, and it has been an absolute pleasure to read his POV. Kovacs (pronounced Koh-vach) does have his saving graces, he still retains a shred of human decency, a sense of justice and is not yet a complete psychopath. He can feel, love and care for other people, just not if they get in his way or commit a crime against him or somebody he cares for.
This novel is a fantastic debut by Morgan, in fact it is difficult to believe this is a first book. The plot is deep and well woven, and I was pleasantly surprised to find its ending, well, a surprise. Morgan doesn't hold back in terms of violence, language or sex. All three aspects are portrayed really quite explicitly, but, and perhaps most importantly, not gratuitously. If that's not your thing, or if you are easily offended, you might find some parts of the book uncomfortable. Thankfully, I very much like the explicit, and this book caters to my tastes very well indeed.
I won't go into any detail about the plot, the blurb on the back of the book is enough and I think expanding on it in a review spoils the read. Altered Carbon gets a full five stars from me, and makes it onto my favourites list. Awesome pie
Takeshi Kovacs is an arrogant sh*t. If you met him, you would most likely regret that day for the rest of your life (which might be terminally shortened henceforth.) He is violent, untrustworthy, impulsive, has very few - if any - morals and is utterly without any kind of personal boundaries. He is also a brilliantly realised and well written character, and it has been an absolute pleasure to read his POV. Kovacs (pronounced Koh-vach) does have his saving graces, he still retains a shred of human decency, a sense of justice and is not yet a complete psychopath. He can feel, love and care for other people, just not if they get in his way or commit a crime against him or somebody he cares for.
This novel is a fantastic debut by Morgan, in fact it is difficult to believe this is a first book. The plot is deep and well woven, and I was pleasantly surprised to find its ending, well, a surprise. Morgan doesn't hold back in terms of violence, language or sex. All three aspects are portrayed really quite explicitly, but, and perhaps most importantly, not gratuitously. If that's not your thing, or if you are easily offended, you might find some parts of the book uncomfortable. Thankfully, I very much like the explicit, and this book caters to my tastes very well indeed.
I won't go into any detail about the plot, the blurb on the back of the book is enough and I think expanding on it in a review spoils the read. Altered Carbon gets a full five stars from me, and makes it onto my favourites list. Awesome pie
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Pharmama
5.0 out of 5 stars
stimmig / nachdenklich machende Cyberpunk Detektivgeschichte
Reviewed in Germany on July 29, 2015
Altered Carbon von Richard Morgan ist eine Cyberpunk Detektivgeschichte. Es geht um einen Selbstmord, der wahrscheinlich ein Mord ist … denn das Opfer glaubt nicht daran, dass er sich selbst umgebracht haben könnte … und holt deshalb den speziell ausgebildeten ehemaligen UN-Gesandten Takeshi Kovacs aus seiner elektronischen Verwahrung.
Tatsächlich wird der Hauptprotagonist (zu meiner nicht geringen Überraschung) schon im Prolog erschossen, nur um “kurz” darauf in einem anderen Körper wieder aufzuwachen … aber diese Verwirrung wirft einen direkt in die Realität einer zukünftigen Welt:
Eine Welt in der jeder Mensch einen Speicher in seinem Hirnstamm implantiert hat, der jegliche seiner Erfahrungen (und damit sein „ich“) aufzeichnet und den man herunterladen, über Millionen Kilometer zwischen Planeten verschicken kann, in andere Körper-„Hüllen“ laden oder auch für Jahre (oder Jahrhunderte) irgendwo in einem Speicher auf Eis legen kann. Wer genug Geld hat, kann mittels dieser Technologie praktisch ewig leben und das in jeweils neuen (geklonten, gezüchteten oder aufgemotzten) Körpern. Die meisten Menschen wählen jedoch – auch wenn sie via Versicherung genug Geld für einen weiteren Körper zusammengespart haben, weil sie jeweils das Altern bis zum Ende durchmachen müssen, diesen Weg nicht und lassen sich nach ein, zwei solchen Durchgängen in einem externen Speicher „ablegen“. Und nur noch gelegentlich für Familienzusammenkünfte zurückholen. Katholiken führen auch in der Zukunft nur ein Leben, da sie der Meinung sind, dass die Seele nicht so gespeichert werden kann und eine solche Wiederauferstehung deshalb Sünde ist.
Der „richtige Tod“ ist also nur mit der Zerstörung dieses Speichers im Hirnstamm möglich.
Dem Superreichen Bancroft, einem „Meth“ (Abkürzung für Methusalem), der schon über 350 Jahre auf der Erde ist, ist das fast wiederfahren … wenn er nicht einen automatischen Backup hätte. Nur fehlen ihm jetzt 48 Stunden und er will wissen, wer ihn umgebracht hat. Takeshi Kovacs wird aus seiner elektronischen Straf-Verwahrung wegen brutaler Gesetzesüberschreitungen von seinem Heimatplaneten Harlans World auf die ihm fremde Erde übertragen und für die Dauer des Auftrages Bancrofts Verantwortung unterstellt. Bei seiner Suche nach der Wahrheit hat er Hilfe von der Polizei,– speziell Kristin Ortega, zusätzlich kompliziert wird die Beziehung dadurch, dass Kovacs den nikotinsüchtigen Köper ihres Ex-Partners trägt, der momentan in elektronischer Verwahrung ist.
Auf der Suche nach der Wahrheit geht Kovacs nicht gerade zimperlich vor. Streckenweise ist das Buch nachgerade brutal – was sicherlich auch mit der dystopischen Umgebung zusammenhängt. Der Tod ist nicht mehr das, was er war. Das ändert einiges grundlegend. Ein Hotel, das eine künstliche Intelligenz ist, Folter in der virtuellen Welt, Low- und High-class Prostitution, Katholiken, die aufgrund ihrer Einstellung zu beliebten Mordopfern werden (die kommen nicht zurück um auszusagen) und mehr findet man in diesem Buch.
Das Buch ist durchweg spannend zu lesen und stimmig in der Wechselwirkung von Detektivarbeit und futuristischer Umwelt – ein Lesemuss für jeden SciFi Fan – der ein bisschen Gewalt nicht scheut.
Tatsächlich wird der Hauptprotagonist (zu meiner nicht geringen Überraschung) schon im Prolog erschossen, nur um “kurz” darauf in einem anderen Körper wieder aufzuwachen … aber diese Verwirrung wirft einen direkt in die Realität einer zukünftigen Welt:
Eine Welt in der jeder Mensch einen Speicher in seinem Hirnstamm implantiert hat, der jegliche seiner Erfahrungen (und damit sein „ich“) aufzeichnet und den man herunterladen, über Millionen Kilometer zwischen Planeten verschicken kann, in andere Körper-„Hüllen“ laden oder auch für Jahre (oder Jahrhunderte) irgendwo in einem Speicher auf Eis legen kann. Wer genug Geld hat, kann mittels dieser Technologie praktisch ewig leben und das in jeweils neuen (geklonten, gezüchteten oder aufgemotzten) Körpern. Die meisten Menschen wählen jedoch – auch wenn sie via Versicherung genug Geld für einen weiteren Körper zusammengespart haben, weil sie jeweils das Altern bis zum Ende durchmachen müssen, diesen Weg nicht und lassen sich nach ein, zwei solchen Durchgängen in einem externen Speicher „ablegen“. Und nur noch gelegentlich für Familienzusammenkünfte zurückholen. Katholiken führen auch in der Zukunft nur ein Leben, da sie der Meinung sind, dass die Seele nicht so gespeichert werden kann und eine solche Wiederauferstehung deshalb Sünde ist.
Der „richtige Tod“ ist also nur mit der Zerstörung dieses Speichers im Hirnstamm möglich.
Dem Superreichen Bancroft, einem „Meth“ (Abkürzung für Methusalem), der schon über 350 Jahre auf der Erde ist, ist das fast wiederfahren … wenn er nicht einen automatischen Backup hätte. Nur fehlen ihm jetzt 48 Stunden und er will wissen, wer ihn umgebracht hat. Takeshi Kovacs wird aus seiner elektronischen Straf-Verwahrung wegen brutaler Gesetzesüberschreitungen von seinem Heimatplaneten Harlans World auf die ihm fremde Erde übertragen und für die Dauer des Auftrages Bancrofts Verantwortung unterstellt. Bei seiner Suche nach der Wahrheit hat er Hilfe von der Polizei,– speziell Kristin Ortega, zusätzlich kompliziert wird die Beziehung dadurch, dass Kovacs den nikotinsüchtigen Köper ihres Ex-Partners trägt, der momentan in elektronischer Verwahrung ist.
Auf der Suche nach der Wahrheit geht Kovacs nicht gerade zimperlich vor. Streckenweise ist das Buch nachgerade brutal – was sicherlich auch mit der dystopischen Umgebung zusammenhängt. Der Tod ist nicht mehr das, was er war. Das ändert einiges grundlegend. Ein Hotel, das eine künstliche Intelligenz ist, Folter in der virtuellen Welt, Low- und High-class Prostitution, Katholiken, die aufgrund ihrer Einstellung zu beliebten Mordopfern werden (die kommen nicht zurück um auszusagen) und mehr findet man in diesem Buch.
Das Buch ist durchweg spannend zu lesen und stimmig in der Wechselwirkung von Detektivarbeit und futuristischer Umwelt – ein Lesemuss für jeden SciFi Fan – der ein bisschen Gewalt nicht scheut.
Juan Carlos Rito Manilla
5.0 out of 5 stars
Muy buena serie
Reviewed in Mexico on August 1, 2023
Obviamente nada que ver con la serie pasa igual que en el libro y película de guerra mundial sin embargo aunque esta en ingles si dice las palabras sin censura una historia muy aparte se centra en los sleeves es lo que pude entender no me parece fantasioso me parece más un novela de detectives en realidad no me parece Cyberpunk me parece genial por el precio de $18.00mxn de ese entonces y porque toca temas taboo







