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Gridlinked (Ian Cormac)
 
 

Gridlinked (Ian Cormac) [Kindle Edition]

Neal Asher
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Gridlinked is the talented Neal Asher's first full-length SF novel, an accomplished rapid-action thriller crammed with high technology, obsessed characters, and the glittering boys' toys of advanced weaponry.

Cormac is a legendary Earth Central Security agent, the James Bond of a wealthy future where "runcible" transmitters allow interstellar travel in an eye blink. Unfortunately Cormac is nearly burnt out, "gridlinked" to the AI net so long that his humanity has drained away. He has to take the cold turkey cure and shake his addiction to instant online access, even while investigating the unique runcible disaster that's wiped out the entire human colony on planet Samarkand in a 30 megaton explosion ...

Hot on Cormac's heels is vengeful terrorist Pelter, backed up by his unstoppable, psychotic android killer "Mr Crane" and a goon squad of mercenaries. Other trouble has been brewing since 27 years earlier, when Cormac was humanity's ambassador to a vast, incomprehensible alien that called itself Dragon. Deep beneath Samarkand's surface there are buried mysteries, fiercely guarded. And is it true that Cormac's enigmatic boss is an immortal who's lived half a millennium and was born in the 20th century?

Asher's galaxy is full of colour and sleaze, and his story rattles along at speed. There are surprises, double-crosses, elaborate lies to be seen through, astonishing escapes from certain death, and last-minute reversals. Though the ultimate fates of the lesser villains seem mildly anticlimactic, the true bad guy is dealt with in spectacular style. Sequels are hinted. Fast-moving, edge-of-the-seat entertainment. --David Langford

Product Description

In outer space you can never feel sure that your adversary is altogether human. The runcible buffers on Samarkand have been mysteriously sabotaged, killing many thousands and destroying a terraforming project. Agent Cormac must reach it by ship to begin an investigation. But Cormac has incurred the wrath of a vicious psychopath called Pelter, who is prepared to follow him across the galaxy with a terrifying android in tow. Despite the sub-zero temperature of Samarkand, Cormac discovers signs of life: they are two 'dracomen', alien beasts contrived by an extra-galactic entity calling itself 'Dragon', which is a huge creature consisting of four conjoined spheres of flesh each a kilometre in diameter. Caught between the byzantine wiles of the Dragon and the lethal fury of Pelter, Cormac needs to skip very nimbly indeed to rescue the Samarkand project and protect his own life.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
My first Neal Asher novel (and his too, I subsequently found). It was a good read - full of nice ideas, good tech, good settings and nice plot twists (though I did guess some bits in advance of reading them). It got me involved in the characters to the extent that I cared if they lived or died, even causing a stir of emotion when one or the other occured. It even made my me laugh out loud a couple of times (at genuine humour, rather than in ridicule)
I liked the settings of the novel, and the future that Asher describes; I like the hero, Cormac, and his companions the Sparkind soldiers, the golem androids, and his shuriken; I liked the lead villain Pelter and HIS companions, Mr Crane, Stanton and the mercenaries; Hell, I even liked the runcible AI's.
But did I like Dragon or The Maker? No way - I found them a bit "unbelieveable", even in this future context, and a bit too "comic book". And did I like the ending of the book? Even more "no way". In fact, did I even understand the ending of the book?
I read the last few pages again and again to try to figure it out. When I started reading the sequel "The Line Of Polity" I had to read the end of "Gridlinked" yet again, because I still didn't get what happened with the Dracomen! And I'm happy (I guess) to read other reviewers here who were equally confused.
Well, I think it's with some dismay that I find Dragon and a Dracoman in "The Line Of Polity", but hey, onwards and upwards and lets see how the plot develops.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I really enjoyed this book from the start even though I thought the ending was a little too obvious. I'm looking forward to the next in the series (on order) and will "make do" with another of his books - "The Skinner" which I have only just started.

Some of the other reviewers have said that Asher's writing falls short of the mark, but I found the book fine and it stands on my shelf next to Iain M Banks and Peter F Hamilton, and just one shelf up from Elizabeth Moon.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This book I just grabbed at a bookstore, while I was in Copenhagen. Didn't know what to expect. The result however was quite convincing. Great scope, thrilling storyline and a nice crop of characters. And it all flows through at a breathtaking pace. I allmost thought of Banks ... So why not 5 stars: Well, would someone please explain to me, how it all ads up. Asher either ran out of battery on his laptop or just decided, that two and a half page would be quite enough to explain 400 pages of complicated and intruiging storytelling. I read the ending again - and again. And I still don't quite get it (very annoying). But other than that I'll have to say: what a ride!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
High-Octane SF
Asher kicks off his Polity series in rollicking style with this opening story. Take a deep breath, because within a few pages we are assaulted by wormhole technology, godlike AIs,... Read more
Published 4 months ago by David Ford
great read
my first Neal Asher book. What a great read this was and has lead me to read the rest of the Agent Cormac Books
Published 12 months ago by D. Batiste
Immersive world's and great storytelling
A pleasant surprise, well written and well paced. Fully realised worlds and technology that allow for an immersive read. Comparisons to 007 are incorrect, this is so much better.
Published 14 months ago by Craddmeister
Gridlinked the start
A good strong story and typical of Asher. A cast of fascinating chacters made more interesting by how they are changed and influenced by the nature of their environment, some good... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Malcolm Roy Ash
A pointless read
I read this some time ago, but it still sticks in my memory as one of the worst books that I have ever read... Read more
Published 17 months ago by NW
Jolly good jape
This was my introduction to Neal Asher - it was on sale in an actual bookshop for 99p - I guess as an intro kinda thing. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Garscadden
Failed to meet low expectations
It's news to me that I have standards for trashy-no-brainer reading material and Gridlinked by Neal Asher does not meet those expectations. Read more
Published on 25 May 2010 by M. Hubbard
Excellent Read, Excellent SF
The best science fiction balances the speculative elements against the need for a good, page-turning read. This is one of the best. Read more
Published on 16 April 2010 by S. J. Horgan
Excellent Book, Great Recommendation Amazon
Excellent book. Great starter for the series. Amazon recommended it and I loved it. I'm on the second in the series now.
Published on 17 Dec 2009 by Caleb Young
Good space opera for the quiet evenings
Neil Asher's Ian Cormac in a grand space opera setting. Enjoyed the book, have now finished the whole saga of Ian Cormac and I'm glad I did.
Lots of memorable characters ... Read more
Published on 12 Oct 2009 by Dr. Stephen Culshaw
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