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Matrix Warrior: Being The One: Being the One (Gollancz S.F.)
 
 
Matrix Warrior: Being The One: Being the One (Gollancz S.F.) (Hardcover)
by Jake Horsley (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars 12 customer reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product Description
Book Description
The essential unofficial companion to the SF movie event of the 21st century so far.

Synopsis
The Matrix has been a movie phenomenon; a massive box-office action hit that was also one of the most intelligent and thoughtful movies of the last 10 years. And now comes the essential (and entirely unofficial) guide for all those seeking to escape the Matrix of modern life. Combining an in-depth reading of the film with philosophical enquiry and the teachings of Casteneda, Jake Horsley has produced a profound yet witty companion to the film; if the Matrix were true this would be all you would need to get yourself unplugged and become The One.

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Customer Reviews
12 Reviews
5 star: 58%  (7)
4 star: 16%  (2)
3 star: 8%  (1)
2 star: 8%  (1)
1 star: 8%  (1)
 
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A companion to the movie or a stand-alone handbook, 17 Mar 2005
By L. Snell (London United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book is so closely linked to the film "The Matrix" that, before recommending it, I would want to know what the potential reader's standing with regard to the film.

Firstly, for the out-and-out Matrix fan or "Neo-phyte"- and that includes both those who loved the original film and hated the sequels and those who loved the whole series - I'd say this book is a must-read. Jake Horsley takes the film's virtual reality concept and provides a whole set of philosophical and practical tools for exploring onwards. The intellectual challenge presented by the film becomes a life-challenge for self- and universe-exploration and growth. If no more Matrix films are ever made - or if future sequels sink so low as to be not worth viewing - there is still enough in the original movie plus Horsley's handbook to last a lifetime. For these readers, of course, being the "unofficial Handbook" would make it the only handbook worth considering - for any "official" handbook could be no more than a mouthpiece for the system itself.

Then there is the readership that sees the book and ignores it - because it is clearly all about a film they have not seen and may not want to see. Particularly in the case of a Pagan/Magick/New Age reader I say this is unfortunate, because the book is about much more than The Matrix. It is also a very neat re-interpretation of shamanic and martial arts "warrior" principles for the twenty-first century. Taking the works of Carlos Castenada in particular, Horsley has synthesised the teachings with the language of cyberspace to define "The Way of the CyberWarrior". Despite frequent allusions to the movie, the effect is not confusing to the uninitiated - if anything it makes one want to get the DVD and watch it.

The third class of reader is someone, like myself, who enjoyed and was stimulated by the original movie but did not bother much with the subsequent cash-in sequels. An admirer, but not an all-out fan. Such a reader might be put off by the subtitle "The Unofficial Handbook", preferring the real thing, wanting to know what the Wachowski brothers themselves put into the movie rather than the opinions of some outsider who clearly failed to win official recognition for his book. Ironically, such a reader has most of all to gain from it.

What could any "official" handbook do but tell you more of what the film was meant to convey but failed to do? Like the extras added to the DVD of a classic film, do they really add to the original artistic experience of the film, or do they simply 'explain away' by contextualising the magic? Instead of that we have an exploration by someone who is clearly a fan of the film, but outside of its circle of creators. As he explains at the end of the book "When I started this exegesis I was willing to entertain the possibility that the Neo-phytes were right and everything in the movie was true. Now that I've completed the work, there seems no way back, no way to tell myself that, after all, the Matrix is just a highly ingenious movie..." So he begins with entertaining an idea, and ends up in a whole new place with no turning back - writing the book has become his own demonstration of taking the movie's red pill.

As he goes on "The Matrix is simply the latest artefact in a timeless process of myth-making by which humanity is shown to be ensconced in a truly diabolic situation, the nature of which entails our complete ignorance of the fact." In this Horsley is mistaken, for the Matrix is not the latest artefact in this process, for his own book has arrived after it. Here indeed we have the most challenging and fundamental role of all: the book need not even be a course of instruction for the warrior of the twenty-first century but a demonstration of anyone's power to transform reality by thinking about and around it. As such this book does not need the film any more, or any less, than an adult human needs its mother. The myth evolves.

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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking and highly readable, 11 Jun 2003
By Scott (Exeter) - See all my reviews
Far more than your standard movie spin off book, the Matrix Warrior, takes the central idea of the Matrix films, as a starting point for an exploration into the nature of reality. If you think that sounds a little dry and dull then I would ask you to read a few pages of this book. It not only offers an accessible introduction to a whole host of different philosophies but it is readable without dumbing down. It's clear from the outset that a lot of thought has gone into the book from its overall structure to the way in which its ideas are expressed. It is that rare sort of stylised book where the style matches what is actually being said rather than just functioning as some form intellectual exercise.

The author has read widely and draws on a number of different sources from the spiritual books of Carlos Castaneda to the philosophical SF of Philip K Dick. The book itself is difficult to categorise in that it straddles a number of genres such as film criticism, philosophy, science fiction and politics. I would say that it is essentially a consideration of how to transcend the lifeless, soul destroying and utterly tedious experience of modern life. At its best it is a tool for setting your mind free. I enjoyed this book on many different levels and I thoroughly recommend it to anyone who wants a well written, thoughtful and life affirming read.

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Matrix Warrior traverses new ground., 16 Jun 2003
Huge in scope, ranging from the Wachowski's film to particle theory and Carlos Castaneda with it's influences, Matrix Warrior sends you tumbling down the rabbit hole from the first page.
The book seems to be offering a wake up call to anyone intuitive enough to accept the fact that we really could be living in a reality made up from our own unconscious desires and fears. The great part is that the wake up call comes in loud and clear.
Mirroring the films description of "Reality" as a dream, the book then goes on and urges us to take responsibility for our own lives and for those who have the courage, to start erasing our programmed identities and embark upon the path of the warrior.
Naver pitying the human race for a second he ruthlessley exposes many of the faults of modern day society and amazingly proceeds to explain techniques for empowerment that really work. (If your awake enough to believe in them!)
At times Horsley's writing equals Anton Wilsons conspiracy classic Cosmic Trigger in it's ability to send the mind to dazzlingly new places, and blurs the lines between the fiction of the film and the desert of the real until they truly begin to dissapear.
As a reader with the constant desire for originality, i was definately happy by the time this "One" had finished enlightening me! Buy or stay asleep.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars It cost's £4.49 to be free
I bought this book in june 2003, and found it to be quite enjoyable. If you belive that the matrix is real, this is a man who lives in "Zion" and is telling his tale. Read more
Published on 29 Jun 2004 by rom_ripper

5.0 out of 5 stars LIFE CHANGING AND AMAZING!!!!
After reading this book I was compelled to watch the movie again! Immediately I realised that my my initial viewing had completely missed the point of the film. Read more
Published on 26 Aug 2003 by Simon Boyd

1.0 out of 5 stars Carlos Castaneda - ha!
Oh come on, Carlos Castaneda! What rubbish. Did you not know that The Architect is Big Daddy Freud himself, and Neo is Nietzsche. Read more
Published on 11 Jul 2003 by Roboyobo

5.0 out of 5 stars Fresh and highly enjoyable, an eye opener to say the least.
What is the matrix? Besides being one of the most influential sci-fi films of the century, it is a philosophical idea which explains how reality is perceived. Read more
Published on 22 Jun 2003 by Mark Fallaize

5.0 out of 5 stars Welcome to the real world
You saw the film , you bought the red pill on a rope , now your'e itching to get some more and you're thinking of buying Jake Horsley's "Matrix warrior-being the one" Depending on... Read more
Published on 9 Jun 2003 by headinabox

5.0 out of 5 stars Matrix Warrior
Hi

I am not a book worm by along shot. But this book is cool in so many ways. It makes you think about the world in a new light which surely can't be a bad thing, in this day... Read more

Published on 8 Jun 2003 by ryanlever3

2.0 out of 5 stars Ecclectic to say the least
I bought this book with a certain amount of excitement. To be honest, although I've had a long standing interest in Buddhist and other spiritual philosophies, I hated The Matrix... Read more
Published on 3 Jun 2003 by Dave Lynch

3.0 out of 5 stars Matrix Warrior: Being The One - Overall a damn good read.
While the initial concept of the book is interesting from both a philosophical and film critique point of view, there are some problems. Read more
Published on 30 May 2003 by wayneward29

4.0 out of 5 stars Awaken Yourself
Matrix Warrior was an excellent read, delving deeply into the sub-text of the film and positing the question - "What if the matrix was real". Read more
Published on 15 May 2003