Don't wake the overrider....
As catchy mantras go, I like it, ... and it grew on me (... no, I didn't get it at first, maybe I was a little slow... but), as a warning, a harbinger, or, I dunno, a curse.... If they end up making this one into a movie (or a Netflix series), I expect don't wake the overrider.... could be right up there with I'll be back.... or, I dunno, Jumanji or, for that matter, Beetlejuice, ... it's not exactly a summoning of a demon, ... but I digress.
In any event, it's been years since I've read Richard K. Morgan, and I admit ... during that time, I hoped he'd return to his unique brand of militaristic, dystopian, gene-altered, star-hopping sci-fi (and, quite frankly, I harbored hopes that he'd return to his iconic protagonist/envoy, Takeshi Kovacs of Altered Carbon fame, book trilogy, and, more recently, Netflix series flesh and blood). This isn't Altered Carbon, but like in that trilogy, Morgan plows new ground (here, well-settled, late generation Mars) and creates a unique brand of protagonist - ah, yes, remember, don't wake the overrider - and takes his sweet time filling in the blanks of the overrider's back-story, capabilities, and ... most interesting for my purposes ... role in the global space community.
Morgan isn't for everyone. Plenty of (graphic) violence? Yes sir, yes sir, three bags full. To the point of excess? maybe. Currently, I'm struggling to get the word "carnage" out of my mind... High octane, bordering-on-the-gymnastic, no subtlety whatsoever, sex? With abandon and without apology. A dark, cynical view of society and governmental institutions, bordering on - and probably qualifying as - dystopia? You betcha. Complicated ... to the point of bordering on the just-plain-messy? Yeah, probably more than I'd like... And, yet, as a whole, the package works.
Reader's nit: I've really enjoyed Morgan's sci-fi, and ... for whatever reason ... his constructs, his stories, his characters resonate with me. But ... and maybe this is just me ... the pages rarely turn smoothly for me in his books, and that's a double-edged sword. I'm not saying the prose or the style is necessarily good or bad, but ... it's unique. For whatever reason, I find that I frequently, and I mean frequently, re-read passages (ranging from sentences to paragraphs to pages). Some of this is that Morgan doesn't shy away from lengthy sentences or paragraphs. But (and this, ultimately, is a good thing), if you don't skim, and if you read carefully, Morgan's work is peppered with innumerable small gifts, what I'd think of as Easter Eggs in a movie or a video game. Whether its a name, an acronym (used sparingly or frequently), a place, or an object, the smallest details are often the most interesting. Indeed, I'd actually love to see a reader's guide to accompany this book.
I guess this means Takeshi Kovacs really isn't coming back. Well, in that case, this was a lot better than nothing.