Member Reviews
Morgan returns to the science fiction genre after a long hiatus. Very well done noir style plot set on a corrupt, deteriorating Mars. Interesting human, cyborg and AI characters!
Award winning author Richard K. Morgan comes up with another compelling read. The Mars based overrider, genetically bred and augmented from infancy for fighting and saving ships, gets involved in complex plot for Earth to retake control of Mars. But there are so many subplots and twists, that keeping track takes a while. It is a page turner, and the fight and sex scenes are as well written as the final plot twists. This is a good read, and will make a great movie someday.
A very solid book. Morgan is great with his characters. I'm always interested to see what they are going to do next. They are never predictable, yet the books aren't noticeable written o confuse the reader. This book continues that.
I really liked how Mars was the setting, but not the topic. Too many books that have Mars being settled focus on Mars as if the planet were a main character; here, a very interesting Mars is present, but it never feels gimmicky. It's a background that - perhaps as it should - provides the backdrop for the story, with community / Nationalism as a factor for some of the characters. It feels natural that way.
Really good read. I can't wait for more in this setting. I'd love to see what happens over time both with these characters, and on Mars and the rest of the expanding Human presence as alluded to in this novel.
Soooo worth the wait!
Richard K Morgan's newest cyberpunk noir mystery is easily the best scifi I've read in years. Readers of Black Man (13 in US) will recognize the hero as one of the augmented "hibs", or hibernating humans from that excellent novel as well as the same colonized Martian setting. For the unitiated, don't worry, there's no need to have read any of this authors books before.
This story is trademark Morgan: A sexy and action-packed hardboiled political thriller full of colorful characters, snappy dialog, plot twists and reversals, and very cool tech. But there's nothing stale here. This is a fresh new character and he is the baddest one yet. The (fourth) world is descibed with rich detail that never tends towards infodumps. I often skip sex scenes, but these here are critical to the story and quite arousing.
And, of course the action scenes . . . so awesome! Visceral and, I don't know . . . really neat.
Highly recommended for anyone interested in thuglit, mysteries, science fiction, or just plain masterful writing.
The tech is hot, the corruption is rampant, and the grit doesn't wash off easy. Richard K. Morgan's Thin Air is a fast-paced scifi thriller set on the 4th planet from the sun. Hakan Veil has an issue with his physiology: his mech-infused body needs to sleep four out of twelve months of the year, and the wake-ups are rough. Twitchy, grumpy, and filled with angst-ridden rage, Veil takes a job to off a local thug kingpin. The first domino is knocked over... and what will come is a clash of corporate greed, law enforcement double-dealing, an Mars independence movement, and one local freelancer, Veil. Armed with his biting sarcasm, a mind for negotiation, and a couple big guns, he will try to protect his charges, track down a lottery "winner," and do his best to come out unscathed in the end. Hmmm, I'm thinking that will be quite a gamble!
Veil's character is awesome; he's a man of many past alliances who is built on desperation and now obsolete tech. But his instincts are intact and his reputation lends itself to hard bargains. Told in 1st person POV, Morgan's writing thrives in the desriptions of Veil's interaction with his witty interactive headgear used for detecting threats, among other important uses. Overall, a very memorable PI/ hired gun.
Morgan's writing opens with a shotgun blast of Mars-speak. The slang, the technology, the background of the politics of the Red Planet... it can be dense and overwhelming, but I say stick with it. The most important info will come back around. I do have to say that there may have been one too many side missions in this one, a puzzle wrapped in a... but the ending is one of the best I've read in awhile. Complex and rewarding... it's the big finale at the end of the fireworks show.
Thin Air is a vastly rewarding read. Not easy to work out, but satisfying and fun. A sparky array of gangs and bureaucrats... all the nefarious peoples of the galaxy.
I was given this book free by NetGalley for an honest review.
Full disclosure, I've loved Richard Morgan's books from when I read the first Takeshi novel many years ago. However this one.......is no different, I loved it.
Starting the story, it was a little overwhelming at first, so if you life books that gradually introduce you to the world with lots of explanations, this is probably not for you. It's immersive and you either sink or swim. It's an adult novel in every sense, purposeful, direct, violent, with a smattering of graphic sex. I guess you could call it a cyberpunk novel, but you'd probably be doing it a disservice. It's equal parts detective story, revenge and many other categories all rolled into one novel.
Don't look necessarily for a long story ark, although there's a theme running through it to provide direction. There's just so much happening. I liked the characters that were introduced in different settings. Hopefully this is a set of characters and world that will live on in more stories.
Thank you to NetGalley and Random House Publishing Group - Ballantine for a digital galley of this novel.
If you check out the Amazon.com information for this book it shows 544 pages, the Goodreads info shows 400. I can tell you it definitely feels more like the 544. And it started off so well with Richard K Morgan getting the noir element just perfectly blended with the science fiction. I was fully on board with Haken Veil and his backstory of the four months of the year cryo sleep, coming out of the coma on "hot" ready to shred and destroy pretty much anything that got in his way. This seemed like it was going to be my kind of dark hero with the Mars background and culture just adding to the good stuff. Then I began to notice my reading was slowing down and slowing down and then just not getting anywhere at all. Okay, I persevered and read about almost every kind of political and criminal backstabbing plot you could think of. I grew weary! I got bored! I wanted so much to like this a whole lot, but just couldn't make it happen.
I think if about half of this book's plot had been saved for another book it would have been fine. As it was, there was just too much and too many. There is profanity coming from every character but I can understand the need for that - all of these characters were dark, dirty, or damaged. However, what I hadn't bargained for were the explicit sex scenes. Yikes, that's not what I want to read in my science fiction novels. I've got an imagination, otherwise I wouldn't be reading science fiction; I can imagine those scenes for myself. And don't think it was there to emphasize the relationship between the two characters, that had been done very well before the sex scenes. All in all, I wanted to like the book much more than I did.
Richard K. Morgan is one of my favorite authors and I am glad that he has returned to science fiction. That being said, Mr. Morgan is more convinced than I am that large politics forces are good narrative drivers. The Quellist theme in the Altered Carbon series made me yawn and the political gyrations in "Thin Air" are no more convincing. The activities of the many factions and their attendant thugs make this a very crowded story, albeit with of good, convincing violence of the type that Mr. Morgan writes so well.
There is a fair amount of explicit sex in this book. As much as I like sex, I wondered why it needed to be so explicit for this readership, preferring as I do, to allow more to the imagination.
I like the Mars setting but this is a bit too seedy for me. I know that was the intent but for me it seemed gratuitous. Take away Mars and this could've been set in any unsavory locale. If that's bwhat you're after, here you go. Otherwise give it a pass.
My review has been posted to my blog & Goodreads.
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A while back my fiancée and I tried watching Altered Carbon on Netflix. We made it through one episode with no interest to continue. That should have been a good indication that Morgan’s stories may not be for me, but then again Netflix has long traded quality for quantity and Morgan’s new book showed up on Netgalley and it’s been a while since I read some scifi and it was set on Mars, so I took a chance. A decision I’ve come to regret over and over during the countless, ok, not really, it was technically one morning and one day, but still entirely too long of a time it took to get through. And here’s the thing…it may not be Morgan at all, he seems to be wildly acclaimed award winning author, it might have just been the non existent author/reader chemistry, but boy, did I loathe this book. Kinda knew I wasn’t gonna like it from the first pages, but no, my OCD drives me to finish every book I start and since it’s such an odd uncharacteristic display of drive for an otherwise drivefree person, it gets tolerated. So I waded through this entire book, 400 pages that definitely seemed longer and the denseness of the text not only prohibited speedreading/skimming, but did indeed justify using wading as an adequate descriptor. The thing is when you stuck reading a short book you don’t care for it creates a dislike at most, when the book is this long…it’s hate. Like a tedious family function, it just seemingly wouldn’t end. Slowly, sluggishly, the plot convoluted around some tiresome Martian politics, while Veil (the macho protagonist that reminded me of the main guy on Altered Carbon, is that all Morgan writes?) glowered, plowed, fought, killed and screwed his way through his impromptu investigation. At no juncture did I care about the protagonist, the plot or any of the characters, which is pretty depressing of a status for such a long book with so many players. Just wanted it to be over. Morgan seems to write using pure testosterone for ink, it’s all clipped, tough machismo with some occasional very graphic sex scenes. It’s also very heavy on tech and light on world building, the exact opposite of how I like my science fiction. It’s like all the wrong aspects are detailed and all the fascinating things are skipped over. And then there was a shoot’em up finale and it was finally over. Whew. If it seems like I just gave up on the book early on and then merely went through motions, it isn’t so, I really did try to get into it, but it just wasn’t meant to be. Even Mars wasn’t enough. Turned out to a tragically tedious trip to such a spectacular literary destination. What a waste of time, though. Not fun, not even entertaining, learned nothing, gained nothing but yet another reminder to be more selective, at least before committing to large books. I bet there are readers out there who’ll love this, but for me, Morgan, either cinematically or literary, is a no no. Thanks Netgalley.