Woken Furies: A Takeshi Kovacs Novel
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)
Available Platforms
Description
More Details
Excerpt
Similar Series From Novelist
Similar Titles From NoveList
Similar Authors From NoveList
Published Reviews
Booklist Review
Following Altered Carbon 0 (2003) and roken Angels0 (2004), Morgan's anxiously awaited third Takeshi Kovacs novel makes a terrific addition to an award-winning series. This time Morgan takes a giant leap into the cyberpunk future that William Gibson begin exploring 20 years ago. Unlike Gibson, however, Morgan combines the cyberpunk style with a fast-paced, first-person narrative that is as evocative of classic hard-boiled detective fiction as it is of cutting-edge science fiction. His protagonist, Kovacs, a futuristic version of a ronin0 ("for hire") samurai, is back on his home planet, Harlan's World. The ruling Harlan family awakens Kovacs from digital storage into a newly constructed body and launches him on a mission that weaves a dangerous course through labyrinthine politics and murderous hardware. But Kovacs also has his own agenda. Vengeance and a quest for a long-lost love continually put his loyalties into conflict with his powerful and ruthless new employers, in a future where death may or may not be forever. Highly recommended for followers of the series, cyberpunk devotees, and hard-boiled detective fans not averse to a little genre-bending. --Elliott Swanson Copyright 2005 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
In Morgan's powerful third cyberpunk noir SF novel to feature Takeshi Kovacs, whose consciousness is transferred from one ultra-combat-ready body to another in the service of various unscrupulous powers, the interstellar mercenary returns home to Harlan's World, thoroughly pissed and dangerous. Despite his justified cynicism, he finds himself trying to protect a young woman who may house the soul of a martyred revolutionary from centuries earlier. He also must fight a hired killer who's a younger version of himself. To succeed, he has to sift through his past to see which allies and memories he can trust. Morgan has become even more nervy since winning the Philip K. Dick Award for his confident first novel, Altered Carbon (2003). This book develops a baroque, appallingly complicated setting, full of opportunities for revelation and betrayal. Both violence and sex are troweled on thickly but appropriately; they have significant consequences for these people who are trying-in circumstances even more desperate than our own-to discover who they really are and who they might have a chance to become. Agent, Susan Howe at Orion (U.K.). 8-city author tour. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Library Journal Review
Takeshi Kovacs, former special agent, now enforcer-for-hire, returns to his birth planet, the grim Harlan's World, intent on tying up some loose ends from his past lives. When he encounters a female mercenary who reminds him of a woman he thought was dead, his plans are derailed as he becomes embroiled in the planet's labyrinthine politics and meets a killer who claims to be a younger version of himself. Morgan's third novel (Altered Carbon; Broken Angels) featuring the hard-boiled hero Takeshi Kovics (and his Del Rey hardcover debut) roils with the grit and turmoil of life in a grim distant future, where consciousness resides in removable "stacks" that can be excised from a dead body and housed in a new "sleeve." The author's eye for detail and feel for the atmosphere and nuances of sf noir result in a story packed with action and angst that will also appeal to general suspense readers. Highly recommended for most sf and popular fiction collections. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
In Philip K. Dick Award-winner Morgan's latest (Broken Angels, 2004, etc.), Takeshi Kovacs heads home to a pack of bad memories and a battle with himself. That's no metaphor. In this far-future world, people who can afford it (or have employers who can afford it) download their personalities into new bodies, or "sleeves." The only catch is, sometimes they run into copies of themselves. Kovacs used to be an Envoy, member of the merciless, nearly superhuman corps employed by a no-nonsense UN to hold in check a far-flung galaxy of settled planets. Now he's just trying to make a living, which usually involves a lot of people ending up dead. (What morality Kovacs had as a kid that wasn't scrubbed out by gang life on the rough-and-tumble streets of Harlan's World was effectively erased by Envoy training.) Back home, Kovacs must battle against the planet's repressive, pseudo-Muslim religion; long ago, its fundamentalist misogyny led to the death of his one true love. Before long, he's tangled with the local ruling class, the First Families. Then he meets Sylvie, who may be the reincarnation of a messianic figure from centuries past. She too is targeted by the First Families, who don't want the power structure upended again, and the guy they send to dispatch Sylvie may be a copy of Kovacs himself--only younger and not quite as bright. Hammering cyberpunk action, with an occasional detour for a stirring speech against religious fundamentalism. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
/*Starred Review*/ Following Altered Carbon (2003) and Broken Angels (2004), Morgan's anxiously awaited third Takeshi Kovacs novel makes a terrific addition to an award-winning series. This time Morgan takes a giant leap into the cyberpunk future that William Gibson begin exploring 20 years ago. Unlike Gibson, however, Morgan combines the cyberpunk style with a fast-paced, first-person narrative that is as evocative of classic hard-boiled detective fiction as it is of cutting-edge science fiction. His protagonist, Kovacs, a futuristic version of a ronin ("for hire") samurai, is back on his home planet, Harlan's World. The ruling Harlan family awakens Kovacs from digital storage into a newly constructed body and launches him on a mission that weaves a dangerous course through labyrinthine politics and murderous hardware. But Kovacs also has his own agenda. Vengeance and a quest for a long-lost love continually put his loyalties into conflict with his powerful and ruthless new employers, in a future where death may or may not be forever. Highly recommended for followers of the series, cyberpunk devotees, and hard-boiled detective fans not averse to a little genre-bending. ((Reviewed September 1, 2005)) Copyright 2005 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Takeshi Kovacs, former special agent, now enforcer-for-hire, returns to his birth planet, the grim Harlan's World, intent on tying up some loose ends from his past lives. When he encounters a female mercenary who reminds him of a woman he thought was dead, his plans are derailed as he becomes embroiled in the planet's labyrinthine politics and meets a killer who claims to be a younger version of himself. Morgan's third novel (Altered Carbon; Broken Angels) featuring the hard-boiled hero Takeshi Kovics (and his Del Rey hardcover debut) roils with the grit and turmoil of life in a grim distant future, where consciousness resides in removable "stacks" that can be excised from a dead body and housed in a new "sleeve." The author's eye for detail and feel for the atmosphere and nuances of sf noir result in a story packed with action and angst that will also appeal to general suspense readers. Highly recommended for most sf and popular fiction collections. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
In Morgan's powerful third cyberpunk noir SF novel to feature Takeshi Kovacs, whose consciousness is transferred from one ultra-combat-ready body to another in the service of various unscrupulous powers, the interstellar mercenary returns home to Harlan's World, thoroughly pissed and dangerous. Despite his justified cynicism, he finds himself trying to protect a young woman who may house the soul of a martyred revolutionary from centuries earlier. He also must fight a hired killer who's a younger version of himself. To succeed, he has to sift through his past to see which allies and memories he can trust. Morgan has become even more nervy since winning the Philip K. Dick Award for his confident first novel, Altered Carbon (2003). This book develops a baroque, appallingly complicated setting, full of opportunities for revelation and betrayal. Both violence and sex are troweled on thickly but appropriately; they have significant consequences for these people who are trying--in circumstances even more desperate than our own--to discover who they really are and who they might have a chance to become. Agent, Susan Howe at Orion (U.K.) . 8-city author tour . (Oct.)
[Page 41]. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Morgan, R. K., & Dufris, W. (2006). Woken Furies: A Takeshi Kovacs Novel (Unabridged). Tantor Media, Inc.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Morgan, Richard K and William Dufris. 2006. Woken Furies: A Takeshi Kovacs Novel. Tantor Media, Inc.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Morgan, Richard K and William Dufris. Woken Furies: A Takeshi Kovacs Novel Tantor Media, Inc, 2006.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Morgan, R. K. and Dufris, W. (2006). Woken furies: a takeshi kovacs novel. Unabridged Tantor Media, Inc.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Morgan, Richard K., and William Dufris. Woken Furies: A Takeshi Kovacs Novel Unabridged, Tantor Media, Inc, 2006.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
---|---|---|---|
Libby | 1 | 1 | 0 |