James Shelley has left his lover, Delphi, and his companion-in-arms, Jayne Vasquez, with a fortune acquired from a fallen oligarch. They believe him to be dead, and he doesn’t try to set the record straight. His long-running question has been There are other soldiers like him who have served the purposes of the Red—and he has accepted his place among them.
As a soldier of the Red he pursues covert missions designed to nudge history away from existential threats—but that doesn’t mean the world is growing more orderly. It’s only in the froth of a “managed chaos” that human potential can grow and thrive. Shelley’s missions eventually take him into orbit—and into conflict with those he loves—Delphi and Jaynie—who are determined to escape the influence of the Red.
I'm a writer from Hawaii best known for my high-tech science fiction, including the near-future thriller, The Last Good Man, and the far-future adventure series, INVERTED FRONTIER.
Though I don't review books on Goodreads, I do talk about some of my favorite books on my blog and those posts are echoed here. So I invite you to follow me for news of books and many other things. You can also visit my website to learn more about my work, and to sign up for my newsletter.
Like the title suggests, but it doesn't quite spell out, it's a novel of going dark and silent as well as a right-hand turn going straight into the darkness.
I mean, we already knew that Shelly was going to leave the side of the angels and go deep into black-ops for the sake of a "god" that he can't trust, but at least he's able to rely on his idealism to salve his conscience. Right?
Right. And so we have black-ops military events that continually get fucked-up beyond belief and and it's now time to fully start questioning why he should allow himself to be controlled by others, be it the Red or anyone else. It's good to question, to get a little skeptical, and it keeps the story plodding away between action and misgivings.
As a straight techno-thriller, it's pretty decent, but there's one thing that disturbs me. The ending of this book, much like the rest of the books in the trilogy, has a vaguely unsatisfying ending. Maybe it's the ambiguity. I'm never quite sure who are the good guys in the novel, although I have the feeling that I *should* be rooting for Shelly. After all, he's still King David going in against an enemy of giant reputation.
Still, the book has a lot of open questions and it looks like we're going to have to pick things up in new instalments. We kind of have to at this point. Things may not be up in the air so much for Shelly, anymore, since he's been locked-down, but it looks like there are too many players on the board for anyone to be sleeping soundly, anymore, despite the respite.
This is a pretty fun series, and should be a must-read for you folks who love military SF only slightly futuristic from where we are now. AIs and cybernetic implants, hooya!
Going Dark was decent finish to a series that was very good overall. This last book lacked the emotional element present in the first two books, instead focusing strictly on the carrying out of various missions. I think the book suffered slightly by not having any relationship story included in it this time around, but that is just my personal feeling.
The Red is a good series. Unfortunately this book is only a mediocre entry in that series.
James Shelley is now totally committed to the Red. Working as part of an Existential Threat Management (ETM) team, he and his fellow LCS Red-influenced soldiers seek and destroy things that represent a threat to civilization or the Red itself. But he still cares about the life he's left behind, and those people still care about him.
Like the previous books, this one is very episodic, split up into code-named missions that are action-packed and slowly further the narrative. The problem here is that the narrative is already about as "furthered" as it's going to be at the start of the story. We already know that the Red is alien in its thought processes. We also know that it doesn't hesitate to sacrifice its "pieces" or exert direct influence over them. And Shelley has long suspected that the Red is not necessarily a cohesive whole.
So there's not much to be revealed here, other than perhaps Shelley's final fate. Which, like many soldiers after a long career, feels a bit anti-climactic.
Overall I really enjoyed this series. I did feel like the end was a bit unsatisfying and that there are quite a few loose ends for this to be the last installment. I actually finished this yesterday but I had to think about it before I related it. Books where the line between the good guys and the bad guys is very thin always leave me feeling a bit unsettled.
I was pretty disappointed with the last book in this series. I really missed the relationships and connections Shelley had from the previous two books.
There was plenty of action but it became really repetitive. Go on mission, shit gets fucked, get out by the skin of your teeth, rinse and repeat. Not until near the end did I even feel like I cared what happened.
I ended up liking the open ended finale we got but most everything leading up to it I could take or leave.
Going Dark, the finale in Linda Nagata’s terrific military science fiction trilogy, “The Red,” returns Lt. James Shelley to the front lines of a war dominated by artificial intelligence. Presumed dead following his low-Earth orbit exploits at the close of The Trials, Shelley has been serving as a squad member in the secret Existential Threat Management team, a group of soldiers whose deaths have been faked by The Red AI and who carry out missions on the intelligence’s behalf. After a look-and-see mission in the Arctic puts the world’s superpowers on the edge of all-out warfare, the ETM’s cover is blown by a traitor and Shelley and his team find themselves once again serving the US on a series of risky missions related to the competing ideologies of various rogue AI’s that may be off-shoots of The Red.
As exhibited in the previous two novels, Nagata has a strong knack for creating deeply layered plots and dense narratives. The various scenarios she puts Shelley and company through are intriguing and paint a highly interesting view of the world as seen through the eyes and minds of these soldiers, a world that is constantly being manipulated by the overarching, and far-reaching, influences of an unstoppable and uncontrollable artificial intelligence.
In this final chapter, Nagata adds a few new wrinkles and subplots, enough so that I hope and wish for more novels in this series despite it being billed as a trilogy. Over the last two books, we’ve gotten hints of a bigger scope to the world as humanity slowly takes to the stars. Here we get a brief mention of Mars preppers looking to make it off-world, but the narrative remains strictly Earthbound. Frankly, I’d love to see Nagata take on outer space at some point. Going Dark, though, does serve a fitting finale to the story of James Shelley, even if a lot of the larger concepts surrounding him go unresolved. With The Red, Nagata has created an overwhelming game-changer, an uncontainable genie that is not easily put back in the bottle. As with the prior installments, though, the focus is strictly on the human element and the ways in which characters respond to the evolving world around them. I have to applaud Nagata for still finding new aspects of Shelley’s character to play with, and for surrounding him with a supporting cast, many of them new faces, who are special in their own right.
Regarding the narration, Kevin T. Collins has become the voice of the series, and there’s a certain comfort factor in his return here. The speech and timbre are familiar, and listening to him once again embody James Shelley is a welcoming, easy listen. The production values continue to be high, and the narration proceeds without a hitch for its 16 1/2 hours run-time.
Packed with a number of explosive action sequences, solid world-building, and characters that are worth the time investment, Going Dark is a strong finish to Nagata’s “The Red” series. Taken a whole, this series has quickly become a personal favorite. If you’ve read or listened to the prior installments, finishing it up with this finale is a no-brainer.
I enjoyed this series, but #3 was a bit of a letdown.
The action scenes have to be there, because they are part of the Brand of this series, but I found myself skimming them. Gencom, gencom, AI lights up targets, bam, repeat. Someone gets hurt and we drag them out. Repeat.
What makes it work this time is the repeated way it all works until it doesn't, and Nagata is careful not to tell us why. Is the the Red? Local AIs? Someone (everyone?) up the chain of command?
One gets perhaps a little tired of the old "tough soldier ain't gonna let no brass hats tell HIM what to do," and it almost wanders into "You're Off This Case! Give me your gun!" - but Nagata saves it with an examination of the squad deciding who they should be loyal to and why.
The themes of non-linear war and the-AI-genie-can't-be-put-back-in-the-bottle are very good.
The ending? Meh. OK with what happens re Shelley, but I figure that after some 1400 pages we should get to know what Nagata thinks the Red is and what it's up to.
Also I want to know who decided it would be a good idea to let the Red have a way to influence soldiers' thinking. Was Shelley really the first to think "Wai-ai-ait a minute ..." I have a growing feeling that Nagata had no choice but to leave it unresolved, because all the resolutions I can think of are in the painting-oneself-into-a-corner variety.
I may have missed something, but for me Leonid wasn't credible as the benevolent uncle, given what he was before, but it's possible, so OK.
Also not sure about the local AIs being philosophically capable of realizing that the Red exists and needs to be (and can be) deked out.
But in the end, the whole story arc of Shelley-theRed-the higher officers was an interesting and effective choice.
A near-future MIL-SF/Cyberpunk-ish thriller series in which a cyborged commando unit under the control of a rogue AI protects the planet from Existential Threats.
MIL-SF is a swamp. I rarely read it any longer. There are too many knuckle-dragging authors writing in the space killing BEMs for carnage's sake. Nagata's series has been both militarily correct and not all about guns and drums and drums and guns (Hurroo). This is the final book in the series. I started the series a long time ago, and finally got around to finishing it. The previous book in the series The Trials wasn’t bad, although I thought the first book in the series First Light to be much better. (My reviews.)
This was a military science fiction /thriller that dances around the A.I. Is a Crapshoot with a militarily cyborged soldier as the protagonist. In this last book, James Shelley becomes part of a deep-black, commando organization working for the benevolent rogue A.I. (The Red) that has infiltrated his implants and is making A World Half Full a better place. Very well written futuristic military actions ensue. However, Shelly discovers that The Red isn’t Mission Control . It can take control. Plot-lines started in the earlier books are advanced. Finally, the series is given a soft ending with the potential for a reboot. The writing is good particularly the action sequences. This story was darker than the other books in the series. The author achieves a pseudo-cyberpunk atmosphere and moves the story quickly to an ambiguous series ending. Frankly, it’s a non-ending.
My dead-tree copy was a hefty 465-pages. Original US copyright for the story was 2015. Reading this book without having read the other books in the series is not recommended. The book leverages and ties-up almost all the plots in the previous two(2) books.
Linda Nagata is an American science fiction author who writes stories mostly in the cyber/tech sub-genres. This is the final book in her The Red Trilogy.
Prose was good. Dialog was militarily authentic. The military badinage was particularly amusing. Descriptive prose and tech were good. I thought the slide from the modern state of the world into a more dystopian one was credible. Action sequences, particularly combat were better than good. Shelly is the single POV for the story.
There was no sex, or drug abuse in the story. Violence was physical and firearms. It was moderately graphic. Descriptions of resulting trauma were minimized. Body count was in-line with full combat in a war zone.
The main character is Shelly. He’s a super soldier. He’s martyred himself to work for The Red to make the planet a better place. His death has been faked. He’s voluntarily lost his girl, his family, and to a certain extent his country. He is however, In the company of Men (and Women) fighting to make the world a better place. The antagonist was The Red. It was an AI which had escaped into the wild and remains undercover manipulating world events. The AI can access and hijack computer controlled resources and the efforts of established organizations as is needed. Never Trust The Red. The Red is not human. There were numerous supporting characters from the previous books and newly created. These include the love-of-Shelly’s-Life, Delphi. However, mostly, they are military, ex-military, politicians, technologists, arms dealers, terrorists and human collateral damage.
The plotting sucked, if only because in this last book of the series it ended ambiguously with sub-plots obviously dangling. Military science fiction tropes in the story continue in the modern flavor of Joe Haldeman and John Scalzi. The AI tropes are mentioned above. Most of the story is Shelly and his commando squad going on too many ‘Missions at the command of The Red. In the process we get an abbreviated World Tour of the near future “hot spots”. The final mission reminded me of an updated Blackhawk Down. The big turn is when Shelly realizes he’s lost his free will. He quits The Red. He ends up On the Beach with the girl, at least temporarily. The series comes to a perfunctory ending.
This was a moderately entertaining MIL-SF/Cyberpunk-ish thriller series. The author continued with using well executed MIL-SF tropes (powered armor, computer mission control, battle robots, etc.) in the mildly dystopian near future that started the series. The riffs on these tropes were more than good enough for my jaded palette. This book was much darker than other books in the series. A MIL-SF reader will find it entertaining. However, it was a non-ending to the series. Long-term plot lines were left hanging. Existential threats to humanity, including The Red are still Out There.
I think I'm interested in reading a story in The Red universe from the author The Last Good Man, but not right now.
Going Dark closes out The Red trilogy in an unsatisfying manner. Lt. Shelley has gone off the grid entirely, now handling Existential Threat Management for The Red. Whenever the enigmatic AI detects a threat to its existence or to world security, Shelley and a squad of soldiers who have been marked officially dead in the databases, and survive in the cracks of the classified world with forged orders, show up and trouble-shoot with extreme prejudice.
The story opens with an assault on a arctic oil rig that's being used to house a potential biowarfare lab, but the mission goes tits up. There's a shootout with mercenaries, the lab turns out to be doing secret pharmaceutical work, the extraction is late, and eventually when Shelley and ETM Squad-7 get back to their secret lair, hidden in plain sight on an Army base in Texas, they get blown by their intel contractor and turned back over to the US Army, who needs them to do one last mission to save the world.
There's plenty of action, and Nagata still has a fine eye for shoot-outs, but little of the character moments or social criticism that made the prior books exceptional fiction. Shelley is officially dead, estranged from the world, and working for a rogue AI, but it's treated as shockingly normal. There's little tension within the unit over the weirdness of their situation, and for all the blather about 'non-linear warfare' and unlikely allies, a jovial Russian arms dealer stereotype seems pretty likely in this world. Dragons (in-setting term for the super-rich), the fragile state of American democracy in a world traumatized by nuclear terrorism, and even the desires of The Red, are treated in a mostly pro-forma way. I thought there was some cool potential with the idea that The Red had grown out of an advertising algorithm and wanted to make happy endings for people, whatever that might mean, but it acts mostly as a literal deus ex machina.
I think there's room for sequels, and it's a decent enough book on a sentence to sentence level, but the later seasons of Person of Interest handled these topics way better.
I'm not a big fan of military science fiction. Battles tend to bore me and set me scanning. But the small squad fighting like in these books is a more interesting to me than armies clashing. What was most interesting here is how seamlessly Nagata integrated the technology. The way she was so good at making the soldiers seem real, the fighting seem real and the tech seem real, it always felt so completely true to life that I almost forgot this was science fiction. These books have a vitality that works for me, plus strong characters. And the relatively near-future situations are really believable projections from our present, good, bad and ugly. The technology, the geo-politics, the economics, the intense interactions of all of those things, the world that Nagata has created is one of the most vivid and believable that I've read. There's something about her writing style that's so crisp and clear. We say all of the time, " it was like a movie, I could picture the whole thing in my head perfectly." Well this was 3D.
But a tip — don't get the paperback if you have vision issues, the font is extraordinarily small. I had to return it to the library and wait for the hardback, which is a tiny bit better. If you have vision issues, get the hardback, or even better, get the ebook.
An incredible ending to an amazing trilogy. I ate all three of these up and waited to finish the third because I knew once I'd finished it, there wouldn't be any others (as far as I know). So what is the answer? How much of what we do day-t0-day is really in our control? Are we under the wiles of our own internal Red? It's a question I struggle with, given what little science knows about our brains and some of the strange experiences I've had (It's almost as if there are two people inside my head sometimes, fighting over how I will react; maybe it's that old devil on one should, angel on the other cliche). Nagata's Shelley struggles with that issue as well. How can he really know if he is the one calling the shots? Can he be truly in control of his destiny? Read the whole trilogy. You won't regret it.
I hope Linda Nagata eventually continue the story, because I am still curious about the overall motivation of the red.
I enjoyed the fact that each of the 3 books is different. In this one yes there are stil mission/episodes, but the first endeavour kind of fail and the protagonist are not even sure what was their goal (this is answered later in the book). So the overall feeling of this book is one of ambiguity.
By the end of the book we know various powers are trying to influence the red through other smaller (local)AI and that the red is ready to sacrifice individuals including Shelley. So is the red ultimately evil? Based on the three books I do not think so, but it is ready to sacrifice 'the few' for (possibly) the greater good (also was the red somewhat compromised..... this is hinted)...
A great finish to the series. James Shelley is still doing invisible ops with his unit. The book starts with them on a mission to the Arctic for a presumed sinister biological or other weapons lab. The target turns out to be a more innocuous (though potentially profitable) medical research lab. Innocent and not-so-innocent people get killed, the unit's extraction plan falls through, they have a hard time getting out, and there are international consequences. This and other hints make Shelley wonder what kind of game their kind-of-boss, the mega-AI called The Red, is playing. Or if the Red is fragmented or compromised in some way, or battling it out with other AIs. Or does it have goals that humans can't understand?
Meanwhile, Shelley finds out that Delphi and Jaynie are working on getting to Mars to establish a human settlement there, which Shelley thinks is a horrible idea. But he can't tell them that; they think he's dead.
After the Arctic, there's a change in the command structure, which Shelley and his unit are not happy with. Still, they go on several new missions. The Red and/or the American government are closing in on something, even though nobody is exactly sure how it all fits together.
The ending answers quite a few questions but doesn't resolve everything. And isn't that how life is? As usual, Nagata's writing is magnificent. I loved the book.
Linda Nagata is at her very best when she is writing high-intensity military fiction. In Going Dark, the plot has freed her from some of the more emotional aspects of the story line allowing her to focus on riveting action pieces. The plot is basically: Mission/Break/Mission/Break, etc. Nagata writes with military analysist's direct use of description and a disdain for figurative language--I think I counted maybe two uses of metaphor in the whole novel. This absolutely works in creating suspenseful action moments that make a hundred pages fly by. The ending is a little too brief, and I felt that she never really resolved some of the underlying questions and nature of the main series' plotlines. I would have rather she left it unresolved and left open the possibility for another sequel. Regardless, this is one of the most fun times I've had with a book in a long time.
It's not bad, per se. Very action-oriented, and entertaining, but there is nothing to be looking forward once we knew, at the very beginning, about The Red. Except, maybe, to learn what would be the fate of Shelley once The Red was done with him.
And, as he has been slowly getting less and less attractive as a character for me, that wasn't a big incentive.
Still, not a bad story, just less than what I was expecting.
Terzo ed ultimo capitolo della Red Trilogy, Going Dark ci riporta nelle avventure di James Shelley, ormai divenuto un vero e proprio soldato del Red, l'entità cibernetica autonoma in grado di influenzare la volontà di qualsiasi individuo, o quasi, e la quale agisce secondo una propria logica e cercando di perseguire un obiettivo, piuttosto esplicito in questo ultimo episodio della trilogia, che porterà il nostro protagonista a scontrarsi contro chiunque cercherà di ostacolarne la realizzazione, compresi coloro che un tempo erano considerate tra le persone più care a Shelley e nei confronti delle quali egli sarà inevitabilmente chiamato a compiere una scelta: nulla è, tuttavia, così semplice e scontato come potrebbe apparire.
Questo capitolo conclusivo della trilogia rappresenta senza dubbio quello più adrenalinico: i momenti di pausa sono davvero pochi e si assiste alla lettura di pagine e pagine di scontri e sparatorie, una vera e propria manna per tutti gli appassionati della sci-fi militare e tecnologica (devo, ahimè, constatare quanto l'autrice sia stata arguta nell'intuire l'importanza del ruolo giocato dai droni nelle guerre del futuro, come testimonia anche il recente conflitto in Ucraina) ma che, a mio avviso, devo ammettere che crea un po' di confusione nel lettore, più a causa dei numerosi personaggi che vengono tirati in ballo nel corso della narrazione piuttosto che delle dinamiche della stessa, in un vorticoso carosello di "super-cattivi" che ci sfila davanti nel corso della lettura. L'epilogo, tuttavia, sebbene non particolarmente sconvolgente, l'ho trovato abbastanza riuscito, in quanto riesce a svincolare la narrazione da possibili soluzioni banali, il cui rischio era particolarmente alto.
Insomma, nel complesso la Red Trilogy è ampiamente promossa: è riuscita a tenermi incollata alle pagine e, nonostante il tempo da dedicare alla lettura sia sempre più scarso, posso dire che l'ho relativamente divorata, considerando le tempistiche bibliche con le quali di solito riesco a terminare una lettura. Caldamente consigliata!
Shelley isi insceneaza moartea si se alatura unei organizatii secrete care lupta de partea The Red. Misiunile sunt tot mai alambicate si implauzibile, tot ce poate merge rau va merge rau, si lumea pare sa scape la mustata de un genocid ca sa nimereasca intr-o apocalipsa. Ce mi-a placut: faptul ca Shelley incepe sa traga concluzii legate de The Red (care nu mai e un Dumnezeu binevoitor, ci un jucator dispus sa-si sacrifice piesele, sau poate chiar mai multi jucatori cu interese diferite). Ce nu mi-a placut: tot restul. Misiuni trase de par, descrise in mult prea multe pagini, fara simtul actiunii si al urgentei din primul volum. Noi coechipieri, mai generici si deci mai putin interesanti; Nagata putea sa-i omoare pe toti si nu mi-ar fi pasat deloc. Finalul absolut dezamagitor, si lipsa unei concluzii clare legate de The Red. E clar ca Nagata vede in universul asta o vaca de muls, dar pe mine unul m-a pierdut de musteriu; spre final, aproape ca-mi doream ca Apocalipsa aia indelung dejucata de Shelley si The Red sa vina odata. Nu-i dau o stea pentru ca e totusi un roman ingrijit scris si pentru ca unele din ipotezele anticipative geopolitice sunt interesante.
I enjoyed this series, but it was a tad confusing. To me, the RED was mentioned a lot, but we never got an inside knowledge or background. The readers were in the dark as much as the characters.
Overall good sci-fi military action. I liked the 1st book the best (The Red), then this one, then the 2nd. I would recommend you read the books in order so you come to understand the relationships and plotlines.
I had to struggle through this one - because I really enjoyed the other two books in the series. I think Nagata took for granted the cool tech that was established in the first novel, and then just turned this into an action thriller. Similar to a Mitch Rapp book. The potential there - and plenty of existential plot elements, especially when it came to body/mind modification. It just didn't quite rise to the level of the precious two books.
The Red is still around and still stirring up trouble. Some of the characters are still fighting the battle the Red wants and some are trying to get as far away as possible. For me the plot just came to a stand still and the end was a bit of a disappointment. I do think it is an interesting series but each book held my attention less and less. Try it and see what you think.
Pretty good ending to the trilogy. Definitely too much non-stop war, but done pretty well. Though in the end it's not real clear what gets resolved. Not a happy book, this is not a pretty future. And it remains a very different take on emerging AIs. 3.5 of 5.
I should maybe not have read all three of this trilogy back to back, by the time I got to this book I was feeling a little bored with the story and the hero. Still, it was a good conclusion to the story.
While the first book was a really great read, second was much less exciting and the third was a real letdown. Nothing was completely resolved, character relationships and the story were mediocre and honestly it was a huge disappointment after such a promising start. Too bad.
Final book in the Red trilogy. A worthy finale to the set, bringing to a close an expertly plotted and written tale of near-future warfare, AI gone rogue, and global politics.
Conclusion of the RED trilogy. I gotta admit ending is not what I expected but then again it is in line with - so to speak - reality of the situation (how one can defeat incorporeal and for all means and purposes omnipotent creature?).
After being saved in the aftermath of [for all means and purposes] suicide mission on the Dragons (Semak) satellite in Earth's orbit (end of book 2), Shelley finds himself now working for a deep black strike team (presumably one of many, but nobody knows for sure since they are all isolated from each other) that works directly following the RED's commands, and is named rather optimistically - Existential Threat Management (name itself does not guarantee long life span to its members, doesn't it?). These missions throw Shelly and his team across the world and very soon he starts noticing that at crucial decision making points both he and his team start to act in a weird way, taking risks that might not be most reasonable.... at any time.
And this is the crux of the novel for me - what started as an adventure with just goals (nuclear incident from the first book) ends up as series of fire fights for establishing supremacy of .... somebody/something. People die and everybody is aware that they are not exactly in control but they continue pushing on. So when Shelley starts to notice the patterns he gets involved in more and more deadly situations that it seems like somebody is just trying to get rid of him (very reminiscent of famous novel Armor).
Book is rather dystopian. When you read it, you can see some parallels with for example "Person of Interest" show. In both cases very powerful AIs are using their human operatives for stabilization purposes. But while POI AI aims to prevent wrongdoing, RED is not so humanistic. I have to admit author absolutely succeeds to show alien nature of AI. It is not human organism, it does not think in the same way nor does it have motives that one would expect from humans.
So, while book might seem as a series of battles, episodic in nature, it also shows how use of black operation operatives - where nobody can trust anyone, where some weird shady organizations lurk in the background and are marked as friendlies or hostiles according to some external ruling - is a very dangerous thing, used for instigating inter-state wars. Bug again what is the purpose for this and is it possible that all AIs showing up here are just heads of the same Hydra-like organism remains an open question. Ambiguity of all these activities still looks like lots of false flag operations to keep state governments shaken (especially after the clandestine decapitating strikes) to make sure everyone is in the open and under control. By the way, that constant mantra that everyone needs to be visible and made accountable is horror story in itself (and in making in our own times).
While ending is very realistic in my opinion (as realistic as it can get in work of fiction of course) some of the story arcs are left hanging (in lack of better word). For example entire story about the Mars colonists - I sort of a see where this was going but suddenly it just ended. Why? This had to be resolved in a much better way because at this point one has to wonder what was the purpose of Broken Sky and who incited it (again, lots of doubts and possible RED false flag operations).
As for supporting characters they are all great, from Kanoa to Abajian, Leonid being the show stealer especially in the last third of the book. Issam was a tragic figure, and while he seems to be author's means of hinting at ways humanity might fight the AI control I think he was little bit underused. He just popped up and very soon was gone. Not in a rushed way mind you but with him gone, question remains who was he actually working with.
So, lots of questions, and pretty open ending. I dont know if book 4 was in offering but I think it would be a good idea. Because of many open threads at the end I cannot give it full 5 stars.
Excellent thriller, maybe a slightly weaker than rest of the series, which in itself is truly great techno thriller series, with very believable characters and action.
Highly recommended, but do yourself a favor and start from the first book in the series.
Im 3. Band der "The Red"-Trilogie bescheibt Linda Nagata den Kampf von James Shelley, der im letzten Band vermeintlich gestorben ist, um seine Menschlichkeit. Er läßt sich von der EGM (Existenzielles Gefahrenmanagement) einer geheimen Einheit, die im Auftrag der KI „Das Rote“ nach Gefahren für die Menschheit sucht und diese eliminiert, rekrutieren. Doch er beginnt zu zweifeln, denn bereits die erste Mission, die beschrieben wird, läuft schief: Der Versuch, ein Labor in der Arktis zu überprüfen, eskaliert zu einem internationalen Konflikt. Shelley beginnt, die Absichten des Roten zu hinterfragen oder zu zweifeln. Unausgeglichen, voller Sorgen und Zweifel und nicht sicher, wie viele seiner Gedanken wirklich ihm gehören, setzt Shelley einen Fuß vor den anderen. Immer wartet die nächste gefährliche Mission und Shelley hat nie Gewissheit, dass er das Richtige tut und dass das Rote weiterhin seine schützende Hand über ihn halten wird, sieht die KI doch kein Problem darin, einzelne Menschen für ihre größeren Ziele zu opfern... Nagatas Abschlußband der Trilogie hat das, was auch die Vorgängerbände ausgezeichnet hat: Einen sympathischen, aktiven Protagonisten, viel Action und futuristische Technologien mit einem Rattenschwanz teils aufregender, teils beunruhigender Auswirkungen auf die Welt. Doch die Reihe riskanter Missionen, auf die sich ein zunehmend unglücklicher und von Zweifeln geplagter James Shelley begibt, bietet nicht mehr so viel Neues, was auch schon die beiden Vorgängerbände gehabt haben. Gut fand ich nach wie vor Shellys Zweifel am Roten und an sich selbst. Auch die Weigerung eine klare Einordnung in Gut oder Böse zu machen fand ich bemerkenswert...
The best of the three imo. Lots of action but also some soul-searching as Shelley thinks about if his actions are his own or if he's a puppet of the Red. I'm not gonna give a synopsis of the plot since I think the blurb does an awesome job of telling what's going on and giving intriguing hints. Instead I just want to comment on the series as a whole.
This series is a combination of military sci-fi action with also some introspection on what it means to make choices and what would it mean if your choices were actually influenced by something that can hack your brain and nudge you in the direction that it wants you to go, regardless of the outcome, whether you live or die. I love the action scenes but I also love that that's not all the story is about, that there is more going on, and that it's philosophical and psychological in nature. SO there's scenes for my "I want to see things go BOOM!" part of me and also scenes for the part of me that says "I want to think deep thoughts and go WOW!". That's how I describe this series. I love Nagata's far future science fiction books and that's how I thought of her as an author. I had no idea she had this action-packed military story in her. I gotta check out the rest of her novels and find out what other facets she has as an author.
Funny how a lot of reviewers felt this was the weakest book of the series. I felt it was the strongest and a fitting ending to the trilogy that saw Captain James Shelley progress from a somewhat idealistic young soldier into a more jaded warrior fighting black-ops operation for The Red. In Going Dark, when his team inadvertently starts a war in the Arctic, Shelley starts to question his somewhat blind loyalty to the rogue AI that directs their missions. He's always known he's a puppet in The Red's army, but the Arctic mission and its consequences has him questioning who or what is pulling his strings and why. For Shelley, there are no co-incidences, and a surprise encounter with his former Lieutenant Vasquez in the Arctic leaves him thinking that a bigger game is afoot. As people from his past begin to re-enter his life, Shelley can't decide who or what to trust. Is there an end-game and what is his role in it? And does he even want to play anymore? Overall, I enjoyed this series. It's a great military sci-fi thriller set in a not-too-distant and somewhat frightening future that makes the reader contemplate our society's dependence on technology and where that might lead us. To connect or disconnect? That is the question.