Reviews tagging 'Addiction'

Bear Head by Adrian Tchaikovsky

3 reviews

kaiiyo's review against another edition

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challenging dark hopeful inspiring reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

Finishing this book immediately brought the song Timshel to mind and I feel the general vibe the song is going for is really explored in this story.
What is morality in humanity and what is our future? Should we be scared of our legacy? 
Clinging to a future that we're not meant to be a part of only stunts our growth.

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norwegianforestreader's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional funny hopeful mysterious reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0


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queenmackenzie's review against another edition

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challenging dark hopeful tense slow-paced

4.5

Thank you to NetGalley for the early reading copy of this book in exchange for anhonest review!
Now, if you, like me, didn’t realise that this was a sequel to Tchaikovsky’s Dogs of War, and haven’t read that book, don’t worry! Bear Head can be easily enjoyed as its own novel, and there is enough contextual background within the narrative for the reader to understand what came before and why it affected what is currently happening. 

It is set in our world, in a near future in which certain animals have been engineered to hold human intelligence and walk among us on two feet. At the time the story takes place, the battle for the rights of these Bioforms has already been fought and won, but things are beginning to deteriorate again, with the issue of ‘Collaring’, an electric collar that would force these creatures to obey their masters without question, being widely debated, just as the earth is slowly falling apart and Mars is being prepared for colonisation. 

This is the place our three main characters orbit around. Jimmy Marten is one of the workers sent ahead to prepare the city on one of the planet’s craters; Honey sends a digital copy of her mind there in the hopes of contacting Bees, the mysterious and dangerous Distributed Intelligence that has retreated to Mars to escape being destroyed on Earth; Carole Springer is assisting Warner S. Thompson, a powerful man on Earth with designs at power, in securing a stake in Hell City. 

Each of these characters has a very different voice, and I enjoy that aspect of Tchaikovsky’s writing; the book opens with Jimmy narrating, and his was probably the hardest mindset to get into, because he is very brusque and cynical, throwing information around only when he is complaining, but he does bring humour to the story, albeit a dark humour. Carole is a little more immediately interesting, because right from the first few lines you can tell there is conflict within her, the way certain thoughts cut off before reaching their conclusion, and the way she interacts with her boss. She was probably my favourite character. 

Honey, being an academic, is the most logical and clear, and she tends to bring together the information found in Jimmy and Carole’s chapters and contextualises them somewhat, because of the knowledge she holds of the past and of both human and Bioform activities. She’s definitely the most loveable character, and though she isn’t physically present much, she was probably the one I could imagine visually as I read her story. 

The political and social commentary of this book is also brilliant, and very current. This was my second Adrian Tchaikovsky book, and I must say I am very much enjoying his style. He’s definitely pulling me slowly into the realm of science-fiction. 

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