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Ack-Ack Macaque

by Gareth L. Powell, Gareth Powell

Series: Ack-Ack Macaque (1)

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18013152,830 (3.35)6
Startling, fast-paced SF from one of the most striking new voices. A cigar-chomping monkey, nuclear-powered Zeppelins, electronic souls and a battle to avert armageddon. In 1944, as waves of German ninjas parachute into Kent, Britain's best hopes for victory lie with a Spitfire pilot codenamed 'Ack-Ack Macaque'. The trouble is, Ack-Ack Macaque is a cynical, one-eyed, cigar-chomping monkey, and he's starting to doubt everything, including his own existence. A century later, in a world where France and Great Britain merged in the late 1950s and nuclear-powered Zeppelins encircle the globe, ex-journalist Victoria Valois finds herself drawn into a deadly game of cat and mouse with the man who butchered her husband and stole her electronic soul. Meanwhile, in Paris, after taking part in an illegal break-in at a research laboratory, the heir to the British throne goes on the run. And all the while, the doomsday clock ticks towards Armageddon.… (more)
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» See also 6 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
The cigar-smoking, heavy-drinking intelligent monkey, fighting as a RAF pilot against ninja nazis is a very pulp concept, but it's not what the book is about. Perhaps more could have been done with that idea. The actual story is about copying and uploading people's personalities to synthetic bodies. A very science-fictional concept, but it is not treated in any deep way. It's mostly a quick, light read, a fun adventure. Entertaining but forgettable. ( )
  jcm790 | May 26, 2024 |
Powell, Gareth L. Ack-Ack Macaque. Ack-Ack Macaque No. 1. Solaris, 2012.
I enjoyed Gareth Powell’s Embers of War series and his recently released Stars and Bones, all of which I found quirky and original. It was no surprise, then, to find these same qualities in his earlier alternate history sci-fi fantasy, Ack-Ack Macaque. The novel was spun off from a 2008 short story in Interzone, and I was pleased to find a copy of it in the Extras section at the end of the novel. The story is set in an alternate near future that split from our timeline in 1956 when England and France merged into a single monarchic state called Brittany. A hundred years later, there are plans to colonize Mars. An infant technology that allows a personality to be downloaded into an implanted chip called a “soul catcher” is gaining popularity, and there are efforts to develop androids into which the soul catcher can be downloaded if the owner’s body dies. An immersive holographic game based on the World War II air war has become a national craze. It features, Ack-Ack Macaque, a long-tailed monkey who chomps cigars and flies Spitfires against gamers playing as Nazi pilots and tries his best to defend the incompetent gamer pilots on his side. The monkey’s uplifted personality is powered by the AI in the game. You win the game if you can shoot the monkey down. No one has. Meanwhile, there is a mystery in which a man with a soul catcher has been murdered and his brain and attached soul catcher have been removed. His ex-wife, an investigative reporter who lives on dirigible, is on the killer’s trail. The novel has the same verve I find in the best steampunk, but with robots and artificial intelligence instead of steam. Fun. Four stars. ( )
  Tom-e | Mar 21, 2022 |
This one ticks a lot of steampunk/dieselpunk boxes - Zeppelins, an alternate history with political union with France that somehow keeps Britain as Top Nation, a conspiracy involving the Royal family, ocean liners and electric Citroens. Except that in chapter 1, an electric Citroen had a clutch and gearbox. And there was a severe slip in the dialogue where one character probes a detective's conversation about a murder suspect and questions why the suspect has been referred to as "him" - except they haven't been. I thought this boded ill, but once we were introduced to the eponymous Ack-Ack Macaque, things improved (possibly because he spoke to me in the voice of Ron Perelman in Hellboy).

Ack-Ack Macaque is a gun-toting, Spitfire-flying pilot in a video game. He has an eyepatch and a permanent cigar. He is quickly revealed to be an avatar of an actual monkey, given brain augments to try to find a cheaper route to AI. Once liberated from the video game, he becomes the counter-conspiracy's secret weapon.

The story moves fairly fast (assisted by quite short chapters) and the level of invention doesn't really flag. Yet for all that the story was supposed to be set in 2059, I kept feeling as though I was in another bit of fantastic film - Goddard's Alphaville, where the dialogue is all about spaceships, computers and interplanetary politics, but the visuals are 1966 Paris in luminous monochrome. Little of the description in this novel suggested we were in the future, just a present day with some different, albeit cool, gadgets.

And then in chapter 18, we are shown the effects of global warming in the form of flooded coastal areas. How come no-one mentioned that before?

There are plots to create a zombie android army; and another plot to seize power by subverting the personality of the Prince of Wales. Why do so many people think that controlling the British monarchy would result in a transfer or seizure of political power? Mr. Powell should go and look up "constitutional monarchy" and see how long we've had one of those - a lot longer ago than 1959, when this world's history diverges from ours.

It kept me entertained for a few evenings, and Monsieur Macaque himself was a pleasant surprise. And yet: this won the British Science Fiction Association's Award for best novel in 2013, jointly with Ann Leckie's Ancillary Justice. The Leckie is a tour de force of mind-stretching ideas; her Ancillary series of books were the first in years to actually engage what old-time fans called "a sense of wonder", for me at least. But a considerable number of people thought that this book was the best thing to appear in the UK that year; to which I say "Is that seriously the best we can do?" ( )
1 vote RobertDay | Aug 19, 2021 |
Fast paced and extremely readable but I felt the mystery part could have been stronger. ( )
  Eclipse777 | Jun 27, 2021 |
Ack-Ack Macaque is a fast-paced romp which reminds me a bit of the kind of plotlines you see in Doctor Who. It's set in the future of an alternate universe where Britain and France united in the 1960s, and features nuclear-powered zeppelins, brain implants enabling computer-augmented existences as well as back-ups of people's consciousness, and a world-famous elite VR video game (the eponymous Ack-Ack Macaque).

The book is more grown-up than your average episode of Doctor Who, but most of its happenings would not be out of place in a two-parter of that show (and honestly, the harebrained scheme of the main antagonists – which involves creating an army of robots with the uploaded consciousnesses of real people, hijacking the British monarchy, and starting a nuclear conflict of China to wipe out the human race – sounds like it totally could've come from an abandoned Doctor Who episode). Its cast would not be out of place, either – a brain-augmented journalist, the back-up of her murdered ex-husband, the Prince of Wales, the “digital rights activist” (heavily modelled on real-world vegan activists) who's the Prince of Wales' secret girlfriend, an expert gamer and hacker named K8… and of course Ack-Ack Macaque himself, a monkey augmented to make him a grizzled, cigar-smoking, superhuman fighting machine.

Anyway… the book as a whole is enjoyable enough, hence the three stars. The main problem I had with it, I think, is that I really struggled to suspend my disbelief enough to get invested in what was happening. The villains' motivations were not very believable and I couldn't take them seriously, which meant I didn't feel the stakes. Sort of like how in Doctor Who, the Doctor and his companions get into all kinds of potentially universe-destroying danger every week, but unless there's been a season-long running theme of ominous warnings, you can count on nothing going seriously wrong.

If not for the fact that I'd bought the whole trilogy as an omnibus for cheap, I'd be pretty content to leave the series here (unlike Powell's other series, Embers of War, which is excellent!). Because I have bought the omnibus though, I probably will return in the future to read the further adventures of Ack-Ack Macaque. Probably as palate cleansers after books that are more emotionally taxing. ( )
  Jayeless | May 27, 2020 |
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For Edith and Rosie, with love.
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Paris, 11 July 2058 - The King and the Duchess of Brittany have been injured by an explosion on the streets of Paris.
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Startling, fast-paced SF from one of the most striking new voices. A cigar-chomping monkey, nuclear-powered Zeppelins, electronic souls and a battle to avert armageddon. In 1944, as waves of German ninjas parachute into Kent, Britain's best hopes for victory lie with a Spitfire pilot codenamed 'Ack-Ack Macaque'. The trouble is, Ack-Ack Macaque is a cynical, one-eyed, cigar-chomping monkey, and he's starting to doubt everything, including his own existence. A century later, in a world where France and Great Britain merged in the late 1950s and nuclear-powered Zeppelins encircle the globe, ex-journalist Victoria Valois finds herself drawn into a deadly game of cat and mouse with the man who butchered her husband and stole her electronic soul. Meanwhile, in Paris, after taking part in an illegal break-in at a research laboratory, the heir to the British throne goes on the run. And all the while, the doomsday clock ticks towards Armageddon.

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