Reviews

Macaque Attack! by Gareth L. Powell

ghostmuppet's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

This series has somewhat lost its way a little in my opinion. Had some great moments, but these were out weighed by a number of poorer areas. Hopefully it will stop there, but i doubt it as there are still areas of the story that have not been completed. If there is another book, i will wait for some reviews from people i trust before i proceed with the book.

theartolater's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

In what has become a sort of holiday tradition, we have a new book in Gareth Powell's Ack-Ack Macaque series this winter. I liked the first one and thought the second one was okay, but how about the third and final?

I wasn't sure what I'd think about the third one given my relative ambivalence about the second. Macaque Attack is the logical conclusion of the results of Hive Monkey, with plenty of monkey clones and some further universe bending that we've come to expect from the series. As the world grows, so too does the character base, and one of the best benefits of the newest book, oddly enough, is that Ack-Ack Macaque isn't present for a ton of it in comparison to some of the other books, and the result is a better read on a whole. We get a good exploration of the post-Hive Monkey world, and it ends up being pretty fun.

For me, I didn't find the conclusion to be the most satisfying thing in the world, as everything is tied up and together for the most part, but considering that it started out with a foul-mouthed, cigar-chomping monkey hero and ended up a lot broader than that, I suppose I can't complain too too much overall.

Ultimately, though, you have to really take this trilogy as a sum of its parts. A surprisingly ambitious story that starts as a video game and ends in basically saving the universe isn't a bad journey to be on, and I honestly think I might feel more fondly about the series had I not read it over the course of 2+ years. It's designed for that sort of pulpy quick hit, and that's ultimately where and how it succeeds. So yeah, overall, if you haven't dove in yet, there's no better time than now to start, and it will probably be a pretty fun read for you if you do.

riverwise's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

The monkey is back, and this time with a touch of added pathos as Ack Ack Macaque tries to come to terms with the inevitability of ageing, and the prospect of impending fatherhood. It's not all touchy feely though, there's still plenty of shit getting blown up. As much fun as the previous three books. Hang on, you say, I thought this was the third book. Mmmmm. Read it and find out what I mean!

ghostmuppet's review

Go to review page

2.0

This series has somewhat lost its way a little in my opinion. Had some great moments, but these were out weighed by a number of poorer areas. Hopefully it will stop there, but i doubt it as there are still areas of the story that have not been completed. If there is another book, i will wait for some reviews from people i trust before i proceed with the book.

oenamaus's review

Go to review page

4.0

Lots of monkey!

lordjim13's review

Go to review page

4.0

Very enjoyable conclusion to a SF trilogy full of mad ideas and memorable characters. As the universe/multiverse of the series expands and expands, even the authors other books apparently get sucked in, but it just about works. Gonna miss that monkey!

jayeless's review

Go to review page

2.0

I've compared the previous two instalments in this trilogy ([b:Ack-Ack Macaque|13547332|Ack-Ack Macaque (Ack-Ack Macaque, #1)|Gareth L. Powell|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1344396179l/13547332._SY75_.jpg|19128070] and [b:Hive Monkey|17571741|Hive Monkey (Ack-Ack Macaque, #2)|Gareth L. Powell|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1382111437l/17571741._SY75_.jpg|24511595]) to the TV show Doctor Who: they're fast-paced, campy romps with just the right balance of science fantasy absurdity and empathetic characters who convince you to soldier on with it. Continuing on with that metaphor, Macaque Attack is a fairly typical RTD-era series finale (or even the finale of your average two-parter)… it's where the showrunners have decided to just do everything, all at once, to the point that you can no longer follow what's meant to be happening and some overwrought emotional scenes can't really make up for the fact that the characters have long since been overwhelmed by “plot”.

Anyway, the good news is,
Spoilerat the end of the book we discover that none of the events that took place in this trilogy were real anyway
. So I guess it doesn't really matter that I struggled to follow along. Sort of a disappointing way for it all to end really.

hisham's review

Go to review page

4.0

HOLY MONKEY MERDE!

Ok. Make sure you read The Recollection first BEFORE reading Macaque Attack. You will enjoy this novel more If you have read The Recollection.

In this, the third Ack-Ack novel, Gareth L. Powell has taken what you think you know about the universe(s) contained in these books, and inspired by some less widely known scientific theories put out by scientists - TURNS EVERYTHING upside-down!

SpoilerIf you already read the first two Ack-Ack books, you'll have enjoyed stories of Cyborgs, Assassins, Hackers, Digital Ghosts of Human Consciousness, Multiverse hopping hive-mind invaders... not to mention an arse-kicking sentient monkey with anger-control issues.

Now (set roughly two years after Hive Monkey) hold on for the addition of EVEN MORE angry monkeys and apes! MORE invaders from another universe. The return of the bad guys (or their digital ghosts anyway) from Mars... and a surprising conclusion to The Recollection!


If you already read Ack-Ack Macaque and Hive Monkey - You need to read this!
More...