More of what I thought about book #1. I could not help but think the story felt too sanitized, the characters too bland, versus what someone like Richard Morgan would write in the same genre (Altered Carbon). I loved the continued plot logic and wondering how our hero misinterprets what is happ...
This is a fun read. While not the first book in the order the author wrote them, it's the first book in the sequence of events in the series. I'm glad I got it knowing that, while I don't mind later flashback books, I really like an interconnected series of books to go in order.The world of the f...
A significant improvement over book two. Significant enough, in fact, and with sufficient impact over the events of said prequel, that it almost redeems the series's apparent great misstep. The people are people again, and in a book about humans, no matter how prefixed, that is essential. Still h...
This is the best of the Post-Human series and I really want to give it four stars, but I cannot. It is better than the rest of the books, and could easily have stood alone by itself.In fact, with very little work, this could have become an SF classic. Unfortunately, it comes at the end of the s...
Djanet shouted as Rich reengaged his magnetic field. “Run!” Rich shouted to the others as Djanet, Alejandra, and Gernot raced toward the entrance to the complex. Dozens of bats had moved within firing range, and Rich’s protective field disappeared as it was simultaneously ...
James announced as he, the A.I., and even the candidate pored through copious amounts of code. Each of them had removed what seemed to be endless amounts of the golden filaments from Kali’s avatar and were hunched over separate tables along the curved glass windows of Cloud 9 restaurant. Thel wat...