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Title: The Line of Polity
Title: The Line of Polity
Series:
Polity: Agent Cormac #2
Author:
Neal Asher
Rating:
4 of 5 Stars
Genre:
SF
Pages:
676
Format:
Scanned Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
A rogue scientist begins working for the Separatists that Cormac had a runin with in the previous book. Skellor, said rogue scientist, has discovered a stash of Jain technology. Jain tech is forbidden by the Polity and as the book goes on, we learn why. Cormac is sent out after Skellor before he can become catastrophically dangerous.
At the same time, a rebellion is
brewing on the planet Masada. Under the control of rigid belief
system that is against A.I. Rule, the theocrats have been in
communication with the dragon. With predictable results. The Polity
gets involved, the dragon gets pissed off and a lot of people are
going to die.
When Skellor takes over the Masada
system, it appears that things have indeed gone “Catastrophic”.
With a whole planet to loot and play with, Skellor has grown into
something beyond human and his abilities are just beginning. It is up
to Agent Cormac to deal with Skellor, deal with the theocrats and
deal with the offspring of the dead dragon: thousands or millions of
dracomen.
Thankfully, Cormac is a Prime Agent
indeed.
My Thoughts: |
I enjoyed this just as much as my previous read in '10. I kept the 4star rating, instead of raising it, because it is evident that Asher is as much a fundamental zealot as I am, but his god is Science and he hates any other belief system. The main difference is that he writes books and interjects that zealotry into his books while I just interject my fundamentalism into small blog posts. So that might not even cross your radar at all.
This is what I like about Asher's
Polity books. Monstrous inhumanity preying upon everything. In later
books we found out how terrifying Jain tech truly is. Whole stellar
civilizations destroyed by it. Here we see it gaining a foothold in
humanity's playground. It might not be sentient, but it has a
Directive. We are also introduced to some alien species, namely,
Gabbleducks and Hooders. Gabbleducks roam the surface of Masada
eating whatever and babbling words. Hooders eat everything, are
impervious to most weaponry and eat their victims alive and by slowly
dissecting them with a whole arsenal of claws, blades, etc.
Another thing I like about the Polity
books is the exploration of the bounds of what it means to be alive.
One character who died in the last book comes back as a golem, ie, a
recording of the brainwaves put into a near-indestructable metal
body. He thinks about what it means for him to have gone from human
to golem and how that affects things. Even if I disagree with Asher's
conclusions, I am fascinated by the questions and how the questions
even come about.
In conclusion, I enjoyed this and have
no problems recommending this series to anyone looking for a bloody
good time. Emphasis on bloody.
★★★★☆