Picture of author.

Michael Brookes (1)

Author of The Cult of Me (The Third Path)

For other authors named Michael Brookes, see the disambiguation page.

9+ Works 68 Members 12 Reviews

Works by Michael Brookes

The Cult of Me (The Third Path) (2012) 17 copies, 5 reviews
Elite: Legacy (2014) 15 copies
Faust 2.0 (Morton & Mitchell #1) (2013) 13 copies, 4 reviews
An Odd Quartet (2012) 10 copies, 3 reviews
Sun Dragon (2014) 3 copies
An Odder Quintet (2013) 2 copies

Associated Works

Best of British Science Fiction 2016 (2017) — Contributor — 34 copies, 7 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Occupations
game producer
Short biography
Michael Brookes is an Executive Producer with a leading UK games developer. Working in games and writing are two of his life passions and he considers himself fortunate to be able to indulge them both. He lives in the east of England, enjoying starry skies in the flattest part of the country. When not working or writing he can sometimes be found sleeping. Which is good as that is where many good ideas come from.
Nationality
UK
Places of residence
England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
This was a haunting and intriguing read. The antihero protagonist was diabolical and despicable, yet I found myself fascinated by him. I wanted him to be successful. Not so much in what he intended to do...I guess I was hoping he'd change his goals and use his powers for a good purpose. I really enjoyed kicking around the provocative question of whether bringing Lazarus back to life was a blessing or a curse.
This is the first book in the Morton and Mitchell series, and if you are overly sensitive or find reading about real news issues translated into fiction, you may want to give this novel a pass. . Also if you are a firm believer that all the ills of the world are committed by people who play video/online games and read ‘the wrong kind of book’ you may want to consider not picking this up.

The character developments in this novel are phenomenal; starting with the ‘birth’ of the entity show more mentioned in the book synopsis above, each of the characters we are introduced too, for however briefly they remain in play, are given depth and traits that draw the reader in and make them want to keep reading. The female protagonist is likeable and easily connected to; we see her written in such a manner that her addiction to her work at the cost of her private life is all too painfully familiar. We are allowed, through the words of the Author to see her strengths, tenacity and weaknesses; and weakness of the characters is a large part of what this novel is. Not just the low-end of society, the criminals and those of low intelligence, but the high society people and all points in-between. Each of the characters has their innermost wishes exposed to the reader in an impeccable and flawless manner, making this so much more than a good cyber-mystery, it becomes an almost voyeuristic look, through the characters eyes, into a society that is quickly becoming fuelled by a ‘something for nothing’ mentality. Despite some of the novels ‘players’ only being on centre stage for a few pages, their personality and reasoning are exposed for all to see and even when they are no longer a focal point, they are linked seamlessly with the others. Each of the characters featured throughout the book are unique in their own way regardless of age and, it is this that makes the actions of the entity seem just that little bit more treacherous.

A lot of the storyline for this book is centred on computers and the computer world, bringing to the fore our increasing dependence on these machines. In parts this book made me shudder at the thought of how easily even the most secure networks could be breached, and are we really that far away from the future depicted in ‘I, Robot’ by Isaac Asimov or even the SkyNet system we see in the ‘Terminator’ movies. However, do not pass this novel by if you are ‘into’ computers, regardless of whether you only use them for work or are a full-blown professional computer programmer, or hacker, this book is easily digestible and believable.

I would recommend this book to anyone who likes mystery, sci-fi and even horror genres, however due to a certain section of the book; I would not recommend it to anyone under a college age reading comprehension.

Originally reviewed on: http://catesbooknuthut.wordpress.com/2013/08/22/review-faust-2-0-morton-mitchell...




This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
show less
This is the first book in the Morton and Mitchell series, and if you are overly sensitive or find reading about real news issues translated into fiction, you may want to give this novel a pass. . Also if you are a firm believer that all the ills of the world are committed by people who play video/online games and read ‘the wrong kind of book’ you may want to consider not picking this up.

The character developments in this novel are phenomenal; starting with the ‘birth’ of the entity show more mentioned in the book synopsis above, each of the characters we are introduced too, for however briefly they remain in play, are given depth and traits that draw the reader in and make them want to keep reading. The female protagonist is likeable and easily connected to; we see her written in such a manner that her addiction to her work at the cost of her private life is all too painfully familiar. We are allowed, through the words of the Author to see her strengths, tenacity and weaknesses; and weakness of the characters is a large part of what this novel is. Not just the low-end of society, the criminals and those of low intelligence, but the high society people and all points in-between. Each of the characters has their innermost wishes exposed to the reader in an impeccable and flawless manner, making this so much more than a good cyber-mystery, it becomes an almost voyeuristic look, through the characters eyes, into a society that is quickly becoming fuelled by a ‘something for nothing’ mentality. Despite some of the novels ‘players’ only being on centre stage for a few pages, their personality and reasoning are exposed for all to see and even when they are no longer a focal point, they are linked seamlessly with the others. Each of the characters featured throughout the book are unique in their own way regardless of age and, it is this that makes the actions of the entity seem just that little bit more treacherous.

A lot of the storyline for this book is centred on computers and the computer world, bringing to the fore our increasing dependence on these machines. In parts this book made me shudder at the thought of how easily even the most secure networks could be breached, and are we really that far away from the future depicted in ‘I, Robot’ by Isaac Asimov or even the SkyNet system we see in the ‘Terminator’ movies. However, do not pass this novel by if you are ‘into’ computers, regardless of whether you only use them for work or are a full-blown professional computer programmer, or hacker, this book is easily digestible and believable.

I would recommend this book to anyone who likes mystery, sci-fi and even horror genres, however due to a certain section of the book; I would not recommend it to anyone under a college age reading comprehension.

Originally reviewed on: http://catesbooknuthut.wordpress.com/2013/08/22/review-faust-2-0-morton-mitchell...




This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
show less
My first Brookes' book was The Cult of Me, which is another good read written by Michael Brookes.

Once again, I wasn't disappointed. His writing and story telling is entertaining.

Faust 2.0 is the story of a malevolent entity working behind an avatar/A.I. Misty is a well endowed female who targets specific individuals, tempting each with promises, encouraging them to make pacts. A man desperate for something more than empty sex. A boy who is tired of being bullied daily. Though equally tempted show more and stumbling along the way, Dan eventually discovers Misty's true nature, but will that be enough to prevent his own demise? Will Misty's suggestive whispers change him into a man he would no longer recognize?

Sarah Mitchell investigates various crimes that all seem to have something in common: a female who met each victim online. Misty. Yet each criminal, shortly after arrest, dies. Why? What is the common connection? As the investigation progresses, Sarah's life is imperiled. Soon, Misty's sights are set on her. Sarah Mitchell has become a direct threat and must die. Will Sarah solve the mystery? Will justice be had or will Misty get away with murder?
show less

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
9
Also by
2
Members
68
Popularity
#253,410
Rating
3.9
Reviews
12
ISBNs
9

Charts & Graphs