This is the third book by this author I have read, the first
two being Altered Carbon and Broken Angels (only the second of which
is reviewed here – I read the first one before starting this blog). Black Man, known as Thirteen in the USA, was published in
2007 and won the 2008 Arthur C Clarke award. Unlike Morgan's other books I have
read, this is a stand-alone novel.
This story is set on Earth a couple of centuries into the
future. A thin but breathable atmosphere
has been generated on Mars, which has been settled but is still very
much a tough frontier world. The USA has split apart into the the Confederated
Republic (a bigoted and backward state popularly known as Jesusland), the north-eastern
Union (closely associated with the UN) and the Pacific Rim states, based on
commerce. Genetic engineering had produced a warrior race known as Variant
Thirteen to fight humanity's wars, a throwback to the ferocious, asocial
individualism of primitive humans with characteristics which had historically
been bred out of humanity in the interests of an urban civilisation. They had
proved uncontrollable, and were soon demonised and referred to as
"twists". The survivors had been given a choice: live in a secure
reservation in a barren part of Earth, or be transported to Mars.
Carl Marsalis is a Thirteen, one who earns a living with the
UN as a bounty hunter tracking down his few fellow warriors still at large. He
is also black, and meets prejudice on both counts. He is the focus of the
action, along with an assorted cast of detectives, COLIN operatives (Colony
Initiative) and criminals. A ship from Mars has crashed into the Pacific and it
is soon discovered that the crew, supposedly in cold sleep for the journey, had
been killed and eaten. It doesn't take long to realise that the perpetrator of
this atrocity was a Thirteen escaping from Mars; he is now in North America,
carrying out what appear to be a random series of murders. Marsalis is hired to
track him down, but finds himself involved in an increasingly complex situation
with one plot twist after another.
There are obvious echoes of Bladerunner, but the plot of the book is a lot harder to follow and
Black Man is frankly too cluttered
with people, themes and events. I had a
particular problem with the author's tendency to introduce minor characters
briefly near the beginning then not mention them again until much later, by
which time I had forgotten who they were and spent an exasperating amount of
time trawling back through the book trying to find out.
While the descriptive writing is good and a lot of space is
devoted to developing the main characters and their relationships, the story
seems strangely impersonal. It is told in the third person and there is little
sense of association with any of the characters; the viewpoint keeps switching
but is principally that of a dispassionate narrator. We are left to learn about
the characters mainly through their words and actions, rather than getting much
insight into their thoughts. Given that the personality of the Thirteens in
general and Marsalis in particular is the key plot element in the book, it
might have been better to let the reader to see the world more through his eyes.
I was sufficiently engaged to read to the end, but only
just, and it is unlikely that I will want to read this one again.
2 comments:
I like Morgan's books, they are always pretty good for me. I am reading Robert Gryn's series Suns of the End, it's absolutely fantastic! robertgrynbooks.com is his site. If you are into series' and you love Tech, he's got it all in this, likely why I love it!
Thans for the tip, Becky, I'll take a look at them!
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