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Hardcover Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (Novel-Hard Cover): After the Long Goodbye Book

ISBN: 1421501562

ISBN13: 9781421501567

Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (Novel-Hard Cover): After the Long Goodbye

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Book Overview

The hulking cyborg counterterrorist Batou doesn't have a family; his electronic brain never dreams. So why did he dream the other night--and dream that he has a son?At one time, Batou had a human love for his partner, the legendary Major, before he witnessed her transfiguration into something beyond humanity. Now he has only his job, and his beloved basset hound, Gabriel. But when Batou has a near-death experience in an arranged car ""accident,""...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Don't miss this "quiet" release!

I'm a Ghost In The Shell fan. I enjoyed the films and LOVE the SAC series. I'm a science fiction fan. William Gibson is easily one of my top 3 authors, I really enjoyed Stephenson's "Snowcrash", and read and enjoyed "cyberpunk" voraciously until it became a rather tired genre. So how I missed this wonderful novel until now, I'll never know! "After the Long Goodbye" is a very worthy addition to the GitS universe, and by the nature of its setting, has a cyberpunk feel to it, but it's so much more mature and thoughtful than much of that genre. It wrestles some big questions, and even poses some interesting answers. It's written in the 1st person from Batou's POV, which surprised the heck out of me in the first two pages, but Yamada has done a wonderful job of putting the reader in the big guy's head without betraying what we've seen on the big and small screens. It's also surprisingly free of the techno-pron I'd expected. I expected almost excruciating detail about weapons, cyborgs and so on but, as Batou himself says, he's "no otaku". There's easily as much philosophy and technology in this novel, as befitting the GitS universe. Strangely, after the first few pages, I sort of gave up on it being a "GitS novel". Little reference to Section 9, a few token appearances of Togusa, no Aramaki, and of course no Motoko... it does not seem like an unaired episode of GitS. However, by the end of the novel, all of the threads come together and you realize that, yes, it's very much a GitS story, one bigger than the television screen, but perhaps too quiet for the big screen. If you read it, perhaps you'll know what I'm trying to say. By the way, it's a quick read, only 180+ pages. Also, the afterward "interview" with Yamada and "Innocence" director Mamoru Oshii is a treat, and offers some fascinating insights into their approaches to this universe, and the "Innocence" film itself. Highly recommended, and required for GitS fans.

A Great Piece of Literature in its Own Right

I picked up After the Long Goodbye during a quick stop at Borders Bookstore for something to read on a long road trip later that day. While browsing around, I just happened to notice the book cover with Batou and his Basset Hound. I was very intrigued, since I had heard nothing about a novel coming out for Ghost in the Shell. At first, I was afraid that it would read very poorly, either due to a bad translation or because of some defect in original source material (since it is a tie-in to the movie). However, I was completely wrong on both counts. This novel is very sophisticated in its language and reads extremely well. Like some other reviewers, I hope that people won't disregard this title just because it's based off of an anime/manga series. I normally take a very long time to get through any novel, but this was a hard book to put down. I definitely recommend it to anyone that is either a fan of the series or sci-fi/cyberpunk in general. The ways in which most things are written here, from the characters to the action and intrigue, were definitely handled with care. Kudos to the translators and the original author.

Science Fiction at its best

In another shocker I have read the book that should set the bar for all SF novels and it's the tie-in to the second Ghost in the Shell movie, GiTS 2: Innocence and is titled "After the Long Goodbye" and takes place right before the movie. It's stunning. It's William Gibson with a pinch of Jeff Noon and some solid medical and scientific fact. It does the absolute greatest take on cyborgs and robots and humans I have read in ages and it's a prose novel by Masaki Yamada, a writer who has won four Nihon SF Taisho awards, Japan's version of the Hugo. It's a novel that I fear science fiction fandom will pass over because it's an anime tie-in which means the mainstream will stay away and the "serious" genre readers will sniff at it as a tie-in (and we all know how bad tie-ins are thanks to our received wisdom). However, instead of writing a simple tie-in to the movie Masaki Yamada writes a powerfully human story of loss, love, and what it is to be a thinking machine. A powerful piece of science fiction that deserves the recognition of the more mainstream SF audience, it is intelligent enough to earn a space next to William Gibson, Jeff Noon, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, and other pioneers of cyberpunk and the most humanistic elements of SF such as Harlan Ellison, Alfred Bester, Cordwainer Smith, and others. Masaki Yamada shows us what can be done if one were to open themselves up to the possibilities that are contained everywhere. While technically "science fiction" he is writing about the state of humanity, about the state of the human soul, and about the future of that soul.

Souls, friends and dogs.

This book is all about Batou - and the many questions he has. Does he have a soul? Why did Gabriel go? Fighting tanks, the yakuza, fast food, racing hounds, homeless guys and the question of where love comes from. This is set before the second Ghost In The Shell movie, Innocence, and also has a bonus discussion between the director, Mamoru Oshii, and the author, Masaki Yamada. There's gun fights, advanced science, philosophy and surreal scenes of the 21st Century.

Not perfect, but worth your time

When I first saw this book I have to admit, I laughed. Being a translation of a book based on an Anime film that was based on a Manga, this is going to be good I thought with a heavy dose of irony. I bought this book more to support the idea of bringing more books over from Japan than any expectations of finding a good book. So, was I surprised when I found that his book was more than just readable, but also enjoyable. Yes. When I found out about the author's reputation in his homeland, my surprise was lessened, but let me say that the translators brought this book over beautifully (not something that is easy to do if you regularly read translations). There were a few typos, which were the fault of the editors, not the translation. The only translation issues I had were cultural, not grammatical (there are some phrases that make sense in Japan that simply will baffle Americans). So, should you buy this book. I have nothing but good things to say about this book, but I know I am not everyone. If you are a Sci-Fi fan (even in passing), YES. If you like a good mystery, you will find a story to enjoy, but the investigation elements are not the focus of the story, so you will probably be as frustrated with the book as you will enjoy it. For everyone else, you have to look into yourself. If you are looking for something new, this is it, but if you want to read without thinking about what you are reading, this is not it.
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