Thirteen by Richard K. Morgan

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: June 2008
  • 560pp
  • Sales Rank: 71,981

    Reader Rating: (7 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Writing Style" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 560pp
    • Sales Rank: 71,981

    Synopsis

    Richard K. Morgan's Thirteen is near-future science fiction, very much in the vein of Bladerunner. When the entire crew of a transport from Mars is killed by a stowaway who turns out to be a violent superhuman from a failed government program, Carl Marsalis is given a choice: use his own heightened powers to hunt down the killer, or face a fate worse than death.

    Publishers Weekly

    This stellar new stand-alone from Morgan, known for his compelling future noir thrillers (Altered Carbon, etc.), raises tantalizing questions about the nature of humanity. Future governments have used genetic manipulation to create subhumans twisted to fit specialized tasks. Normal people are intrigued as well as repulsed, but they instinctively dread variation thirteen, an aggressive, ruthless throwback to a time before civilization. When a thirteen escapes from exile on Mars and apparently goes on an insane killing spree, Carl Marsalis, a soul-weary freelance thirteen hit man, is hired to help track him down. Morgan goes beyond the SF cliché of the genetically enhanced superman to examine how personality is shaped by nature and experience. Marsalis is more empathetic than the normal people around him, but they can see him only as an untrustworthy killer. At the same time, surveying corrupt, fractured normal society, the novel questions whether the thirteens are just less successful at hiding their motives. Without slowing down the headlong rush of the action, the complex, looping plot suggests that all people may be less-or more-than they seem. (July)

    Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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    Biography

    Richard K. Morgan is the acclaimed author of Woken Furies, Market Forces, Broken Angels, and Altered Carbon, a New York Times Notable Book that also won the Philip K. Dick Award. Morgan sold the movie rights for Altered Carbon to Joel Silver and Warner Bros. His third book, Market Forces, has also been sold to Warner Bros. He lives in Scotland.

    Customer Reviews

    Another anti-hero for Morganby doubleduw

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    June 06, 2009: The future political landscape is quite interesting. A good read.

    Watch out, A Thirteen is looseby AllisonB

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    March 27, 2009: Richard Morgan's book THIRTEEN (released in Britain as BLACK MAN) is yet another ripping good science fiction detective novel.

    THIRTEEN gets off to a slow start but then builds to the rapid pace and dense action of ALTERED CARBON, the book that made Morgan's reputation. The story takes place on Terra in the near future. The USA has split into three independent countries and Mars is a colony run by a private company. Deliberately induced mutations have resulted in a range of new kinds of humans, some harmless and others rather frightening, particularly "thirteens", a slang term for men specially bred as soldiers in recent wars. Thirteens are so feared they are locked up, too dangerous for civilian life. An exception is made for some useful thirteens like Carl Marsalis, who works as a bounty hunter, catching other thirteens who have escaped confinement. A serial killer thirteen is on the loose and Carl is sent to catch him.

    As in all Morgan's books, there is a good strong plot coupled with musings on what it means to be human. Are thirteens human? Are they really so dangerous? Is Carl a good citizen or a traitor to his kind?

    Fast action, likable characters, plausible story line, believable tech.


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