Broken Angels

first publication date:  2003-03-20
part of the series:  Takeshi Kovacs
series ordinal:  2
original title:  Broken Angels
original language:  English
follows:  Altered Carbon
followed by:  Woken Furies

Broken Angels (2003) is a military science fiction novel by British writer Richard Morgan. It is the sequel to Altered Carbon, and is followed by Woken Furies. Source: Wikipedia (en)

Editions
5
Active filters

In your inventory

nothing here

In your friends' and groups' inventories

nothing here

Nearby

nothing here

Elsewhere

nothing here
Inventorying
Broken Angels
dare

Broken Angels is, ultimately, a good science fiction story hobbled by horrible characters and poor pacing. I nearly gave it three stars, but finally settled on two since despite the strong points, I was ultimately more annoyed than anything else. <br/><br/>Our protagonist, Takeshi Kovacs, is an insufferable, all-capable, unbelievably cynical cyberpunk stereotype. Of all the POV characters you could theoretically have to look into a world as peculiar as this, using one who has no empathy and practically no sense of wonder is a very uninspired choice. A 13-year-old me might have thought it cool and badass (ooh, look, twin Kalashnikovs), an older me just finds it juvenile and tiresome. The numerous minor characters made me suspect that the author may actually be incapable of writing anyone except tough-as-nails macho assholes. At least they had interesting names.<br/><br/>Broken Angels has a planetary war, a treasure hunt, alien mysteries, corporate espionage and treachery; it's got all the building blocks of an excellent science fiction thriller, but somehow always manages to focus on exactly the wrong things. The story takes way too long to actually get going, and the journey to the Really Interesting Stuff (which, it has to be said, was interesting enough to keep me reading) has numerous speed bumps where stuff happens to nasty people I don't care about in the least. The morally strange area inhabited by the characters would have been interesting, if they hadn't all been bloody sociopaths.<br/><br/>I was kind of looking forward to Altered Carbon the TV series, but on reading this, I was reminded what a tiresome protagonist Kovacs was, and now I wonder whether I can stomach him on the small screen.

Work - wd:Q2849572

Welcome to Inventaire

the library of your friends and communities
learn more
you are offline