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That being said, the author did however have a harder time coming up with a way to show the world in a fully captivating way.
Artyom started as a very passive character, and remained that way until the last third of the book. Rather than driving the story forward, as the main character should, he's simply reacting to it, rarely contributing beyond trying to get to the next station. His problems got solved by random people, who disappeared as soon as they no longer had a purpose, which got repetitive after a while. I can apprecieate subverting the expectation, by introducing a character, presenting them as if they'll play a big role in the book, and then killing them or leaveing their faith untold, but it's no longer subversive, when done so many times.
The suposedly suspensful moments hold no weight, when the previous ones got solved without any problem, or even effort required by Artyom. They feel like page-filler, which is another problem of the book.
The pacing is inconsistent. Fast, action packed moments were interrupted by redundant plots or info-dumps about the world. The two-page rambling about The Great Worm, as funny as it was, when being placed after the main character getting kidnapped felt simply frustrating. It was also extremly similiar to the lecture about God, which Artyom heard after being miraculously saved by the Jehova's witnesses. It felt as if the author thought he needed to give readers a breathing room, because he falsely assesed the intensity of the events. Or he simply needed more pages.
As good as the world building was, I felt lost when Artyom was travelling through different passages, as well as his journey to and beyond Park Pobedy. The author did a much better job explaining places on the ground. During the library scene, I truly felt like I was there with them. The same can be said about Artyom's journey on the ground to get back to the metro station.
The world was the best part of the book, and I could tell the author was truly fascinated by it. He clearly spent a lot of time coming up with the way the stations function and co-depend on each other. Each station decribed felt unique and alive, even if it was simply mentioned. There were many details, that made the world in the metro feel like it was truly a society, which clung to its fromer structure, like the fact you need a passport to travel, the clocks being preserved or the children being taught about a world that no longer exsists.
I am still in shock over how it ended, I did not see it coming at all, but when I think about it I wonder how it could have possibly ended another way.
I am so impressed. So very impressed and also a little bit heartbroken, as one always is after finishing such a great novel.
The written proof that Russians, given the prerequisite of the death of culture and 10-15 years underground, will divide themselves into every ideology possible (and make up a few) and then continue to duke it out. Reading this book with the accent of FPS Russia in mind and the image of every character doing the slav squat made me crack up like an idiot.
Metro 2033 does sci-fi steampunk apocalyptic fiction right. It remains interesting from the start through the end and the constant meetings with new groups of Metro Russians makes the book go at break-neck speed. All this while managing a handful of philosophical remarks and smart monologues. Highly enjoyable (This needs to be turned into an audiobook read by a squatting Russian person in English).