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Browsing through the latest SFX (#130) this lunchtime, I came across a short interview with Richard Morgan, by Jonathan Wright (p36):
"The whole thing with Kovacs is that I wanted him to be a mascot for the dangers of falling for heroism as a concept," says Morgan. "Bleak anti-heroes are all very well and I love them, but you’ve got to be aware of what you're dealing with. Take The Man With No Name, the Clint Eastwood movies. Yeah, he's cool and it would be cool to be able to shoot like that, but you've got to be aware of what comes with that.

"It alarmed me a bit when the first book came out, Altered Carbon, and a number of people said, 'Oh yeah, Kovacs, he's quite violent, but he's a man of honour, he’s got a code.' This chimes with those horrible things that people like Barbara Windsor used to say about the Krays: 'he was a lovely fella, bought flowers for his mum.' You're thinking, 'Whoa, whoa, hold on a minute.'"
To which you can only say: well, quite. I remember people loudly saying the same thing about Spike during Buffy seasons five and six (almost literally so, given his friendship with Joyce). But! Then I turn to page 92 of the same issue, where there's a review of Morgan's latest, Woken Furies, and find this:
The first grown-up book that Richard Morgan read as a child was From Russia With Love. He soon found his way to the Saint books of Leslie Charteris. If Bond and Templar now conjure images of '60s kitsch—Sean Connery and Roger Moore quipping their way to stardom—remember that the books were infinitely darker than their screen versions. Seen through this prism, Morgan’s Takeshi Kovacs is an anti-hero with antecedents, a violent man in a violent world but not a man without ethics.
The reviewer? Jonathan Wright, of course. I wonder which piece he wrote first ...

Also, since I've not yet read it, someone satisfy my curiosity: in what way, exactly, is the carbon in Altered Carbon altered?

Date: 2005-04-15 12:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gummitch.livejournal.com
It's been a while but I think that there's a line in the book about the cortical storage things that allow people to be resurrected being composed of a 'substrate of altered carbon'. Or something like that. The title is just a hook, nothing particularly to do with the plot (except insofar as the cortical storage comes into it).

Date: 2005-04-15 12:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ex-susumu64.livejournal.com
Yeah I'd agree that the title has nothing much to do with the book. If you were determined to wring some kind of sense out of it you could possibly say "Yeah, it's in the future and everything's different and bodies are a resource with a value and if you download into someone else's you're altering it a bit in some vague hand waving kind of way." I haven't read it but I think Broken Angels makes a bit more sense in terms of what the books are about.

Date: 2005-04-15 05:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coalescent.livejournal.com
Tsk. How disappointing.

Date: 2005-04-15 07:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] snowking.livejournal.com
It's altered in a similar way to the angels that are broken and the furies are woken. A bit different from how the market is forced though.

Date: 2005-04-15 11:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ninebelow.livejournal.com
Mod this up.

Date: 2005-04-16 09:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wg.livejournal.com
I don't tell you often enough how much I loff you Mr Hogg. I'm still giggling about this the next morning.

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