One night, he gives up living, and hits his car against a wall. Sibel is the younger daughter of a conservative Turkish family, and proposes a fake marriage to Cahit, in order to permit her to leave her family; in return, she would share the rent of the flat, and she would cook and clean the place, and they could have independent lives. Cahit accepts, but while living with Sibel, he falls in love for her, until a tragedy happens. I saw "Gegen die Wand" yesterday and I am still very impressive with this powerful German movie. The location in St. Pauli, close to the famous Reeperban Street, could not be more perfect as the environment for such depressive story of losers.
The precise direction of Faith Akin obs: When the character Sibel reaches the bottom of the well in Istanbul, Sibel Kekilli shines with a mesmerizing performance. Unfortunately we will never see Hollywood shooting this type of story, which is recommended for very special audiences. My vote is eight. Enjoy a night in with these popular movies available to stream now with Prime Video.
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User Polls Romantic Couples Part: This is my least favorite Scalzi novel to date, but this wasn't bad at all. The summary says that you can read this as a standalone, but I recommend that you read Lock In first. It took at least 50 pages for me to get into this.
Once the story picked up I loved it, but there were too many ups and downs for me. One minute I was glued to the book and the next I was a little bored. I just wish there had been more consisten This is my least favorite Scalzi novel to date, but this wasn't bad at all. I just wish there had been more consistency with the pacing and overall storytelling. I loved the fact that this was a mystery in a science fiction world.
I couldn't wait to find out how Duane Chapman died.
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During their investigation, there was a great twist adding yet another mystery to the story! Overall, I'm still a John Scalzi fan and I plan to read the rest of his works. I don't expect to love every novel from an author. If his "worst" novel is a three-star read for me, that's pretty damn good. Jun 21, Marianna Neal rated it it was ok Shelves: Furthermore, there were parts of Head On that I enjoyed and that actually gave me hope of finally "getting into" this book. But, unfortunately, it just didn't do much for me—the story, the characters, the writing The idea of Head On is definitely much better than the execution, especially considering how interesting Lock In was.
May 18, Anne rated it it was amazing Shelves: I really do hope that there are more of these to come. I loved both books so much! May 14, Maryam rated it really liked it Shelves: Always fun and fast passed Sci-Fi. If you like mysteries and sports, you would enjoy this book. Second book in Lock in series is around a unique violent game for Hadens, small percentage of population who cannot move physically but are present in real world nonetheless through their Threep. Although violent no player should be in real danger but everything changes when a player dies during a game and one of the audience is Chris , the most famous Haden which happens to be a FBI agent who will be in charge for this case along with his not too friendly partner.
I liked this book more than previous one. Please note that I received this book via NetGalley. This did not affect my rating or review. Not a lot to say here besides I freaking loved this book. I loved Lock In the first book in the series and the world that John Scalzi created.
I adored the characters of Vann and Chris. She is just my favorite. It's been several months or at least a year since the events in the first book. When Chris goes to meet his parents at a Hilketa game, he witnesses a player being taken off the field. Everyone quickly realizes the player is dead.
The FBI is brought in due to the fact that the Hilketa game is played by Hadens and that means though the crime took place in Washington, D. What follows is a lot of twists and turns until you have Chris and Vann figure out how somehow could have killed someone while they were playing a game. Chris is still living with his roommates and though they were barely in the first half of the book, they do pop up in the second half more.
His partnership with Vann is still the best. They crack me up and pop off each other a lot. Chris's parents are still reassuringly there for their son and are involved with the plot in this book too. We do get new characters in this one and we get to meet another integrator someone who had the first symptoms of Haden's, but didn't get the full disease whose life I wish we were told more about.
Head-on crash forces closure of A92 through Fife
I swear that Scalzi could totally publish some novellas featuring new characters and I would not be upset. I do love the world that Scalzi has built in this one. Hadens are unfortunately dealing with the fall-out from a bill that was passed in the last book. Many are struggling to make ends meet and now there are rumblings about having non-Hadens get their own threeps as well. I like that Chris sees the issues with this in this book, and I wonder if this is going to pop up in the next book as a plot point.
The ending leaves things with some of the bad guys caught, but with Chris and Vann realizing a bigger conspiracy may be out there. I really did need the X-Files theme song blaring away in the background at this point. Action film packed in paperback format.
Self-contained mystery about a Haden athletic dying while on the field. That isn't too strange if you didn't read the first book. If you did, you'd know that a Haden is someone who is essentially in a coma physically but still able to perceive the world and go about their daily life piloting a robot body with their brain. The athletic died in his bed while his robot body was on the field, which wasn't supposed to happen. It's a short and sweet self-containe Action film packed in paperback format. It's a short and sweet self-contained mystery with a nice ending that tied everything together.
Head On (Lock In, #2) by John Scalzi
I enjoyed the book - sped through it in a few days. I liked the world-building and continuity from the first book about society and life after the Haden syndrome much more than the sports-centered mystery, actually, but to be fair, there was plenty of the former in the book peppered in the background, enough for you to pick it up along the way. Very creative and I was completely immersed in the world and the plot.
May 06, kartik narayanan rated it really liked it. Head On is a good follow up to Lock In. Most of the complaints I had about Lock In have been addressed here, while it still retains all of its strengths. In my review of Lock In, I mentioned that its strength was its excellent world building - on par with any Asimov out there - while it was let down by its poor storyline and paper thin characters. I liked the story in Head On and the characters, while not robust, are definitely better portrayed this time.
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John Scalzi choses to focus on the aftermath of the AK act with its implications on the industries that were relying on the pork coming with the Haden disability act. There is a game here, which while I personally found boring, at least adds to the richness of the story.
In fact, the story revolves around this game and its associated league. There is a nice little conspiracy underlying all this. I am looking forward to the next one! Apr 18, Michael rated it really liked it Shelves: One was sophisticated neural implants allowing their immobile selves mental control and emulated sensory input from android robots, as connected via a super, universal-sort of WiFi.
The second was a special online virtual world where many Hadens prefer to spend the majority of their time in the company of their peers. Our hero Chris is a famous Haden, the son of a wealthy couple who helped lead the policy initiatives behind the life-giving technology innovations. The case that kicks off the story here concerns a Haden, Chapman, who dies while remote-piloting his specialized combat android in a professional stadium game called Hilketa.
This lucrative team sport sounds like a no-holds barred kind of rugby in which points are scored for taking off the head of an opponent and moving it to the goal. The physiological monitoring system suggests an epileptic-like disturbance preceded his death. When one of the company executives turns up dead from an apparent but suspicious suicide, corporate corruption and greed seems to be at play somehow.
A third alternative is that the player who died was killed somehow for personal reasons. His estranged wife of the dead player, a regular human, in fact clues Chris into the affair her husband has been having with another Haden. How is that possible with Hadens? Now Scalzi is giving us an innovation of plausibly large economic interest.
It is a fair projection that lots of normal humans might be willing to get the same neural implants as the Hadens if they could act out and feel things via their choice of anatomically correct or fancifully equipped android avatars for outrageous sex. They outshadow the potential of normal humans with implants for pursuing play in the Hilketa league. All these novel motivations for murder and its coverup are like new wine in the old bottles of a traditional police procedural. Like a cop whose bravado gets him in trouble for wrecking too many vehicles, Chris has a patterns of frequently getting expensive departmental models wrecked, burned up, or run over by vehicles.
And Haden criminals hiding out their selves in expensive simulations in the Agora virtual world can be tracked down there by Chris. Here we are treated to some fun with some fascinating variations. This book was provided for review through the Netgalley program. This review can also be found here!
Let me back it up. The first book had a great and enthralling plot that just sucked me in completely, along with great characters that I just absolutely loved because they were so complex. I devoured the whole book eagerly. I ended up wanting so much more and needed it at that second once I finished the book. At the start, it was bec This review can also be found here!
My friend tried teaching me and I thought they switched goals at half-time and she looked at me like I was fucking nuts. I think that I expected more after waiting, like, four years for the second book in the series. I expected the plot to be just so absorbing that I would space out watching the second season of The Crown and have a reason to rewatch it after two days. They were the same and there was nothing life changing that happened with them. Just doing the same sort of thing. I think what I was looking for was, after an explosive beginning, was for it to slow down and a case would really effect one of them to the point where something happened.
Will I check out the rest of this series if Scalzi publishes more? If you liked Lock In you will probably like this. If you like murder mysteries and aren't opposed to SF you'll probably like this. If you liked anything else Scalzi has written you'll probably like this. And if you like witness protection cats, you will definitely like this! It doesn't repeat the whole subtext of Lock In and doesn't really replace that subtext with anything, but it tells an amusing tale of smart-arsery, corruption, murder, arson, wanton destruction of telefactors - and a cat call If you liked Lock In you will probably like this.
It doesn't repeat the whole subtext of Lock In and doesn't really replace that subtext with anything, but it tells an amusing tale of smart-arsery, corruption, murder, arson, wanton destruction of telefactors - and a cat called Donut. You're gonna hafta read the book to find out what happens to him. I loved Lock In so much and this is every bit as good. Shane and Bank are such an unusual yet brilliant pair of FBI agents, like none others you'll meet, and the near future in which they operate is perfectly realised.
And it's all so much fun! Review to follow shortly on For Winter Nights. Nov 07, Donna Backshall rated it it was amazing Shelves: Dare I say this was better than Lock In? With each new novel, John Scalzi renews his spot in this reader's opinion as the science fiction master of world building, character development and frank dialogue. If you're not reading Scalzi -- or listening to his audio books, narrated brilliantly by Wil Wheaton -- you are truly missing out. Oct 09, Alan rated it liked it Recommends it for: Recommended to Alan by: Previous work; a lifelong fascination with murderball.
I have a confession to make, sports fans: I just can't get interested in sportsball —in any of the many, many so many combinations of spheroids or ovoids and rules and uniforms and fields with lines on them that obsess so many other people worldwide; this is not just an American trait. So when I just now told you that Head On , the sequel to John Scalzi 's Lock In , was recommended to me in part by "a lifelong fascination with murderball"—well, that was a lie, that was.
Which means that I actua I have a confession to make, sports fans: Which means that I actually had a hard time getting traction when I started reading this novel. The prologue and first few chapters focus almost entirely on describing the sport and business of Hilketa which literally means "murder" in Basque, a point Scalzi makes during the course of the novel—you can Google it. Hilketa's played entirely via telepresence—all of the players are "threeps," piloted by remote control.
The sport kind of has to be played that way—one team is required to decapitate the other team's designated "goat," in order to score points with the head. If you're the goat, you just have to try to keep your head on. You don't have to be a Haden to play Hilketa, technically, but experience with telepresence helps immensely Identify the word pairs with a common ancestor.
Can you spell these 10 commonly misspelled words? Build a chain of words by adding one letter at a time. Synonyms for head-on Synonyms: Adverb eyeball-to-eyeball , face-to-face , head-to-head , mano a mano , one-on-one , toe-to-toe Visit the Thesaurus for More. First Known Use of head - on Adverb , in the meaning defined at sense 1 Adjective , in the meaning defined at sense 1. Learn More about head - on. Share head - on. Resources for head - on Time Traveler! Explore the year a word first appeared. Dictionary Entries near head - on head of state head of steam head of the household head-on head-on collision head or tail head over ears.
Phrases Related to head - on head-on collision. Statistics for head - on Look-up Popularity. Time Traveler for head - on The first known use of head - on was in See more words from the same year.