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X-Men 2 [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Chris Claremont
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 416 Seiten
  • Verlag: Del Rey; Auflage: 1 (4. März 2003)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0345461967
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345461964
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 10,7 x 2,9 x 17,5 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 119.425 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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Chris Claremont
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Produktbeschreibungen

Kurzbeschreibung

The action-packed adventure continues as simmering tensions explode with a vengeance.

X-MEN 2

They live among us, each possessing special superhuman abilities—sometimes a blessing, sometimes a curse. Mutants. Since the discovery of their existence, they have been regarded with fear, suspicion, and often hatred. Across the planet, the debate rages: Are mutants the next link in the evolutionary chain or simply a new species of humanity, fighting for their share of the world?

Either way, one fact remains: Sharing the world has never been humanity’s defining trait.

There are two sects of mutants: One aims to coexist peacefully with a world that despises them; the other group strikes at intolerance with a relentless, often murderous force. But now there is a new insidious enemy, and no one will be safe. . . .

Leseprobe. Abdruck erfolgt mit freundlicher Genehmigung der Rechteinhaber. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Chapter One

Mutants. Since the discovery of their existence, they have been regarded with fear, suspicion, and often hatred. Across the planet, debate rages: Are mutants the next link in the evolutionary chain . . .
. . . or simply a new species of humanity fightingfor their share of the world? Either way, one fact has been historically proven: Sharing the world has never been humanity’s defining attribute . . .
—Charles Xavier

“ ‘We are not enemies, but friends,’ ” the tour guide said as she led the group through the East Wing entrance of the White House. “ ‘We must not be enemies,’ ” she continued, pausing to let them gather inside the foyer beneath one of the presidential portraits that lined the wall. “ ‘Though passion may have strained, it must not break the bonds of our affection.’ Abraham Lincoln.”

Alicia Vargas had made this speech hundreds of times, yet she had a knack of making it sound as though she’d just thought it up. She was a short young woman who looked barely out of college, with big, wide-spaced eyes, an open face, a ready smile. That way, you’d miss the fact that those lustrous eyes never stopped moving from person to person among the group she was shepherding along, or that the drape of her blazer masked the Sig-Sauer pistol resting in its snap-draw holster at the small of her back.

Alicia Vargas was Secret Service, just like the tall, broad-shouldered, stone-faced men in business suits who stood at intervals along the walls. At the reception desk and at the doorways leading to the interior of the White House were their equally imposing uniformed counter-parts in the Executive Protection Service. When the decision was made to continue public tours, in spite of the ever-present threat of global terrorism, the Secret Service had insisted that its people take over the job of guides. They understood the political and public relations realities of the office, but their job was to protect the man who held that office, and from that perspective, they argued, you could never be too careful.

Offering up another smile, Alicia indicated the portrait that hung behind her, the sixteenth in the line of chief executives that began with George Washington and culminated today in George McKenna.

“President Lincoln said that in his first inaugural address. It’s one of my favorites. I like to think, especially with all that’s happening in the world, that those words are more important than ever.”

With an apologetic gesture, intended to put the tourists at ease, she led them toward the security desk.

“I just want to repeat what you were told at the Main Gate. Obviously, with the President in residence today, we want to be especially careful. One at a time, please approach the desk, present a photo id, place your bags and purses on the conveyor belt, and pass through the metal detector. Your possessions and all cameras will be returned to you when you leave. I know that sounds harsh, but I hope you understand.”

One man in the back caught her eye. He was wearing a Red Sox baseball hat, pulled low. He wasn’t doing anything wrong; far from it. His body language was totally relaxed and easy. Maybe that was it. Most people visiting the White House came through the door excited, upbeat, impatient, and impressed. Then, seeing the airport-style X-ray console and the metal detector, even the best of them got nervous, wondering if they’d inadvertently brought something that would sound an alarm and get them into trouble.

Red Sox didn’t seem to have a care in the world.

Quickly, as she ushered the first woman in line through the cage, Alicia recalled the scene at the Pennsylvania Avenue gate, where the tour had been admitted to the grounds. She’d watched them come through on the surveillance screens and now that she replayed the scene in her mind’s eye, there had been no Red Sox hat in the group.

Turning back to look for him, she registered a faint sound, the bamf of imploding air, like when a balloon pops.

Red Sox was gone.

From the East Wing entrance, a broad hallway—called the Cross Hall—runs lengthwise through the heart of the building. Originally, this had been the area where the everyday work of the household was done—the rooms housed butler’s pantries, closets, and the like—but successive renovations and the growing need for space had transformed them into formal receiving rooms: the Roosevelt Room, the Vermeil Room, the China Room. At the moment, none of them was in use, which is what caught Special Agent Donald Karp’s attention when his peripheral vision registered some kind of movement in one of the doorways.

When he turned to peer down the corridor, all he saw was shadow inside the deep alcove—that was one of the problems caused by the comparatively low, vaulted ceiling, it made the hallway hell to light properly. He knew it was probably nothing, but he was bored and in the mood for even a minor break in routine. Once before he’d opened an office door and found a couple of mid-level staffers behaving far too friskily for their own good. They’d been lucky they weren’t fired on the spot, but they really should have known better.

To his surprise, as he stepped closer to take a proper look, someone was there—though for some reason he wasn’t sure until the figure stepped clear of the shadow, a lean-bodied man whose stoop-shouldered stance belied the fact that he was roughly Karp’s height, wearing non-descript clothes and a Red Sox baseball cap. Boyoboy, would he have fun roasting Alicia’s ass for being so care-less as to let a tourist stray from the group.

He reached for the man’s shoulder.

“Excuse me, sir, are you lost? I’m afraid you can’t leave the group—”

The man rounded on him—and Karp gasped, goggle-eyed, to find himself face-to-face with a demon. Skin so dark a blue-black it was as if the man were cloaked in his own personal shadow, the only points of color his gleaming yellow eyes. The ears were pointed, the teeth had fangs, and the hand that grabbed Karp’s wrist possessed two fingers instead of the normal four.

Training took over. Without a conscious thought, Karp went for his gun—and a forked tail wrapped tight around his throat, cutting off his cry of alarm. The tail spun him like a top into the alcove, and he felt a blinding pain as the side of his head cracked hard into the arched stone. After that he never felt the blow to the side, chop to the neck that finished the job of knocking him unconscious.

It was all over in a matter of seconds, but those seconds made the difference.

From the East Entrance came Alicia Vargas’ shout—she was already through the hallway doors, coming at a dead run with sidearm in hand, ahead of the other agents and uniformed officers.

Karp’s partner was closer. He lunged for the intruder, who tripped him up with a sideways sweep of the legs—ditching his shoes in the process to reveal elongated, weirdly articulated feet with a two-toed configuration that matched his hands. The intruder leaped across the hall for the opposite wall, somehow grabbing hold of the falling agent’s gun and pitching it clear. His leap landed him up by the ceiling. To Alicia’s astonishment he stuck there, three-quarters upside down, as though fingers and toes were tipped with Velcro.

Above the chandeliers, he was suddenly hard to see, and Alicia realized with a shock that he was blending with the ceiling shadows. Against a dark background, the intruder’s indigo skin made him...

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2 von 2 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Von Jori M.
Format:Taschenbuch
Da freut sich das Fanherz,das Buch zum Film vom Lieblingsautor aller

X-Men fans Chris Claremont.

Was soll man sagen,er hat es einfach drauf.

Aber der reihe nach.

Zur Story:

Die weicht nicht vom Filmgeschehen ab im gegenteil,sie verleiht durch weitere Szenen der Geschichte eine neue tiefe und den Charakteren mehr leben als ich erwartet hätte.

Ein Attentat auf den Präsidenten ruft William Stryker auf den plan,einen Mutantenhasser mit Millitärhintergrund,er dringt,mit genehmigung des Präsidenten der USA, in das Xavier-Institut für begabte Schüler ein(eine Schule für junge Mutanten wo sie lernen sollen mit ihren übernatürlichen kräften umzugehen)und nimmt einige von ihnen gefangen.

Logan aka.Wolverine kann mit einigen der Schülern von dort fliehen nachdem er feststellen muss das Stryker anscheinend irgendetwas mit seinem blockierten Gedächtniss zutun hat.

Unterdessen sind Jean Grey und Storm unterwegs nach Boston um den Attentäter zu finden den Professor Xavier dort ausgemacht hat.

Aber statt eines abgedrehten Mutanten finden sie ,versteckt in einer Kirche,Kurt Wagner aka.Nightcrawler.

Auch wenn er auf den ersten blick aufgrund seines äussreren( blaue haut,fänge,spitze ohren und ein greifschwanz) einen perfekten Bösewicht abgibt,müssen Jean und Storm bald feststellen das er nur benutzt wurde und in wirklichkeit ein feinfühliger Mensch ist der keiner fliege was zu leide tun kann.

Sie nehmen ihn mit um genaueres rauszufinden und erfahren was im Institut geschehen ist,treffen sich mit logan und den Schülern die zusammen mit ihm fliehen konnten.

Raufen sich,nach einer wilden verfolgungsjagt mit dem Millitär, das sie durch einen von Storm verursachten supersturm hetzt, mit Magneto und Mystique zusammen um Strykers pläne(die menscheit von der mutantenseuche zu erlösen)zu vereiteln.

Fazit:

Das superplus bei diesem Buch sind die Szenen die im Film nicht vorkommen,allen voran die mit Nightcrawler und Storm im Blackbird oder wenn er und Mystique sich kurz unterhalten,man erfährt einige dinge die dem film sicher auch gut gestanden hätten und bekommt ein ganz neues gefühl für den Film.

Die innensicht der Personen bringt das ganze auf ein neues level und ist einfach genial.

Wer halbwegs fit im englischen ist und ein wörterbuch hat kommt auch ganz gut mit der Originalversion klar.

Ein absolutes muss für alle Fans,als Fan von Nightcrawler bin ich sicher nicht ganz so objektiv wie andere aber glaubt mir,es lohnt sich das geld zu investieren und sich mit einem Wörterbuch durch die lektüre zu wühlen,es macht einfach spaß es zu lesen,sogar mehr als einmal.

Wer den Film noch nicht gesehen hat sollte beide kaufen aber erst das Buch lesen,ihr werdet überrascht sein wie gut sich die beiden Medien ergänzen.
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4 von 18 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Mutanten zum lieben!!! 4. Februar 2003
Von Ein Kunde
Format:Taschenbuch
Ich habe den ersten Teil von X-Men schon gesehen und gelesen, deshalb ist es für mich Pflicht X-Men 2 auch zu sehen und zu lesen. Dieses Buch hier ist zwar in Englisch, aber dies macht das Lesen noch spannender. Wenn X-Men 2 so klasse ist wie X-Men, dann kann ich nur empfehlen dieses Buch zu kaufen.
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Amazon.com:  23 Rezensionen
4 von 4 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Surprisingly Good 21. März 2003
Von Harkius - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
Well, I don't know how this compares to the first X-Men movie novelization (because I was afraid to read it, after having seen the movie), but this one was written quite well. I can't say that I am terribly surprised by that fact, since it was written by the father of good X-Men stories, Chris Claremont, but I thought that the fact that it was supposed to be a movie would butcher it. However, I have my doubts that most of this will translate well over to the big screen. If the actors pull off the acting half as well as they should, Hugh Jackman and Famke Janssen will both get Oscars.

The characters grew and developed, seemed real and were three-dimensional. I actually cared about them in this book, as opposed to the first movie where I had the ignomious urge to see Wolverine get hurt just to watch the wounds heal up. (When people watch your movie just for a gimmicky special effect, you should rethink your script). Hopefully Stryker is cast well, because his is a key role. John Malkovich might do a good job in the role.

Anyway, pick up the book, its good. Read it after the movie though, that way you will get the most from both.

Harkius

3 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
X-Men 2  Uneasy Alliances **Spoilers** 12. März 2003
Von S. Christensen - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
If the movie brings across most of this as well as the book, it'll be far better than Spider-Man.

It was a relief to see our heroes more in character than in X-1. Logan (Wolverine) isn't exactly a white knight; we see more of his feral, berserker nature, his immense capacity for violence, and his private rationalizations. He ends up searching for his humanity more than his past. That's much more consistent with the complex Wolvie we love.

Jean Grey is troubled-by power quickly growing out of control and an attraction for Wolverine balanced precariously by her love for Scott Summers (Cyclops). (Dare I hope this is leading up to aspects of the Phoenix saga in X-3?) Thankfully, we see more of what she sees in both Logan and Scott and get a glimpse of her past. As a side note, I never thought the Jean Grey of the first movie could take Scot on and win. This isn't the same Jean.

Then there's Xavier, entirely benign in X-1 but a force to be reckoned with in this one-stopping whole rooms of people in their tracks, threatening the lives of all mutants and all humans in turn, and managing secrets like a master. As for Storm, I'm not exactly sure what Halle Berry is complaining about; Storm gets into almost every essential conflict in the story and uses her ability constantly. She may stay mostly static, but that's not exactly out of character and the personality is still better than in X-1.

Scott is out of commission for much of the story. Still, the authors added in missing tidbits from his orphanage past and relationship with Jean that, regretfully, will probably never make it into the movies. Overall, Scott comes off as more patient and gentle than in X-1, though a fiercer and more dangerous opponent. (Did anyone mention his contribution to wreaking havoc on the guts of a dam?)

As for the villains, they're both sick beyond belief. Of the two, though, Magneto was worse. Stryker just wants to kill all of mutant kind; Magneto is going to kill everyone else and his oldest friend. Magneto's treatment in his plastic prison isn't much different, in ways, from his concentration camp past and has forged him into a relentless, merciless, malevolent certainty. Even in prison, he has his own plans and manipulates those who think they're using him. His final betrayal earned my respect but squelched any possible sympathy for him. Mystique, meanwhile, is a vital and more than effective partner. (She's vital in Magneto's planning and the larger story.) Then there's William Stryker, linked to both Wolverine and Xavier and the self-appointed author and finisher of the proposed destruction of all mutants, himself father to one of the most dangerous mutants of all. (Based on Mesmero?) I'll take villains like these over high-powered non-entities like Juggernaut or Apocalypse anytime.

Other small blessings: I had nightmares of Nightcrawler being a willing participant in the assassination attempt on President McKenna (also depicted, thankfully, with some discretion). But he is merely a pawn; the real powers have ways of insuring their subjects' obedience. Kurt Wagner remains a lovable, innocent, gentle, humorous, irrepressible demon. And it's fun to watch a friendship and affection forming between him and Storm.

And then there are the kids; strained relations between Bobby Drake (Iceman) and John Allerdyce (Pyro) are blowing up, and Bobby's burgeoning romance with Rogue is delightful. Growing up and living as a high-powered mutant shouldn't have to be this hard. Rogue has her own role to play, but not much character development. Other characters flit through the book: Kitty Pryde (Shadowcat), Jubilee, Hank McCoy (Beast), Remy Lebeau (Gambit), Piotr Rasputin (Colossus), Teresa Cassidy (Siryn), and others. Some get more time than others.

Plot wise, things are complex but pretty tight. Nightcrawler's assassination attempt unleashes a storm of trouble centering (for good but initially unexplained reasons) around the X-Men. Too many people know too much about them, and both Stryker and Magneto recognize Xavier as the key to victory. Stryker raids the school (not entirely prepared for Wolverine or the training of Xavier's students) and later captures Xavier and Scott. Magneto escapes. Jean and Storm track down the mysterious mutant would-be assassin. Setting the stage for a five-way showdown between ordinary Americans, Stryker, Magneto, the X-Men, and other X-Men. Wolverine chooses between his past and the present. Jean decides between her two men, meets personal tragedy, and finds untapped reserves of strength to carry everyone through. Magneto, as always, has his own plans. Storm and Nightcrawler just have to save the world. Rogue and Bobby search for a place in the world outside Xavier's that is no longer there. And young John Allerdyce decides where his loyalties lie.

A few cautions: We still haven't really seen Storm's claustrophobia. And there's some junk at the end; the authors spent lots of time on the final battle for Xavier but the development of that conflict didn't make much sense. We'll see how the movie manages this scene. But the biggest and most important question is why Stryker raids the school. Then, too, I'd like more clarity on why Jean chooses the way she does...

3 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
X-Men 2 5. März 2003
Von Richard Petsch - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
The book is a real surprise and i know it will be that way to whoever reads it including the X-men fans. The plot is far better than the previous story. It is more intense and action filled.
The villians are more evil than Magneto was in the first story. It has a lot of surprises and gives a sense that people can be together no matter who or what they are.
I enjoyed it a lot and i hope that whoever reads the book after me will come to the same conclusion or at least acknowledge that it was the best X-men story so far that has been written. The book is 408 pages long and I hope people don't complain about its lenght.
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