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METRO 2033. (ENGLISH Ebook) The novel behind the METRO: LAST LIGHT video game. Kindle Edition


The novel that gave birth to the video games 'Metro 2033' and 'Metro: Last Light'

The breathtaking original story that inspired both the METRO 2033 and METRO: LAST LIGHT video games! An international bestseller, translated into 35 languages.

Set in the shattered subway of a post apocalyptic Moscow, Metro 2033 is a story of intensive underground survival where the fate of mankind rests in your hands.

In 2013 the world was devastated by an apocalyptic event, annihilating almost all mankind and turning the earth’s surface into a poisonous wasteland. A handful of survivors took refuge in the depths of the Moscow underground, and human civilization entered a new Dark Age.

The year is 2033. An entire generation has been born and raised underground, and their besieged Metro Station-Cities struggle for survival, with each other, and the mutant horrors that await outside.

Artyom was born in the last days before the fire. Having never ventured beyond his Metro Station-City limits, one fateful event sparks a desperate mission to the heart of the Metro system, to warn the remnants of mankind of a terrible impending threat. His journey takes him from the forgotten catacombs beneath the subway to the desolate wastelands above, where his actions will determine the fate of mankind.
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Dmitry A. Glukhovsky is a Russian author and journalist known for Sci-Fi, Magic-Realism, and his exploration of social and political structures. He began writing his first novel, Metro 2033, at the age of 18, and then published it on his website in 2002, available for all to read for free. The novel has become an interactive experiment, drawing in over 3 million readers world-wide. It has since been made into a video game for the Xbox and PC, was published in Russia in 2005, and in the US in 2010. Most recently it was optioned by MGM studios. In 2007 It's Getting Darker was published, followed by Metro 2034 in 2009, Russia’s best-seller that year, also available free on-line, both as text and as a collaborative art-project with Russian electronic performer Dolphin and visual-artist Anton Gretchko. This was followed in 2010 by a series of satirical stories about Russia today - Stories about Motherland. As a journalist, Dmitry Glukhovsky has worked for EuroNews TV in France, Deutsche Welle, and RT, (the first Russian 24/7 English-language news channel broadcasting the Russian view on global news world-wide.) He writes columns for Harper’s Bazaar, l’Officiel and Playboy. Currently living in Moscow, Glukhovsky has lived in Israel, Germany and France. He speaks English, French and Hebrew fluently, reads German and some Spanish, as well as his native Russian.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B008W9ANW6
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Amazon Digital Services, Inc. (August 10, 2012)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 10, 2012
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 5678 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 461 pages
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Dmitry Glukhovsky
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Dmitry Glukhovsky is a Russian writer, playwright and journalist.

His first novel, METRO 2033, a post-apocalyptic dystopia set in the Moscow subway after the WWIII, started as an as a free-to-read online project in 2002 to become a worldwide bestseller five years later. It is now translated into 40 languages and has already sold over 3 million copies. It also became the basis for the cult METRO video gaming franchise making Dmitry one of the global pioneers of trans media storytelling.

Glukhovsky's following books, METRO 2034 and METRO 2035, SUMERKI, FUTURE and TEXT, have also been published online prior to becoming an international success. He also wrote the film scripts for the feature film TEXT, TV series TOPI aka The Quagmires, and authored a theatre play THE WHITE FACTORY that premiered at the Marylebone theatre in London.

As a roving reporter for television news, Dmitry traveled from Morocco and Guatemala to Iceland and Japan. He was deep in Chernobyl area to film the destroyed nuclear reactor, watched Russian rockets' launch at Baykonur, reported Israel's standoff with Hezbollah under the missiles in Kiryat-Shmona and made the world's first live report from the North Pole. Apart of his native Russian, Glukhovsky fluently speaks English, French, German, Hebrew and Spanish.

A long-time critic of the Russia's authoritarian political regime, after Russia's attack on Ukraine in 2022, Dmitry Glukhovsky was declared wanted by the Russian authorities for a string of newspaper columns and interviews accusing Vladimir Putin of plotting and starting an aggressive war. In August 2023 Dmitry Glukhovsky was sentenced in absentia by a Moscow court to 8,5 years in jail for his pacifist activism. He now lives in exile in Europe.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
7,215 global ratings
it a book.. lol very Good book.
5 Stars
it a book.. lol very Good book.
If you loved playing the game Metro 2033 you'll love this book there's a lot of behind the scenes stuff in the game that was never mentioned out of the book The book goes into more detail into the back end of the metro I'm loving reading it not all the way done at this point in time...
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2016
I first discovered Dmitry Glukhovsky’s METRO series through a video game play on youtube. My son, knowing my love for all things apocalyptic, showed me Let's Play Metro Last Light - Part 1 - In The Beginning… by Christopher Odd. I loved the first video and decided to look into the game. The game was based on a series of novels by Dmitry Glukhovsky. The first two novels were available in English and had audio book versions. The novella which links the first and second book is available in English but has no audio book version. Absolutely no debate on purchasing the audio books.

The universe METRO builds begins in our world. The cold war is over. The USSR is a thing of the past although it’s shadow lingers over modern day Russia. The main character, Artyom, is a young adult. He was born before the event but only has very few and fragmented memories of it. On the day of the event, he and his mother were visiting a park close to a metro station. That is why they survived. The metro stations could be sealed to stop contaminants from coming in (the metro was designed and built during the USSR period). Artyom and his mother make it into the metro and past the doors before they are sealed.

The metro develops into a new society. As time goes on, the different lines or branches develop different political ideologies. Some stations are more desirable than others, some have more resources, some have ways to grow food underground, some have access to uncontaminated water. Before long treaties are made, broken and fighting begins. The metro is no longer one system but a collection of city states that are connected by dark tunnels.

What is in the tunnels is the mystery that lies at the heart of the METRO 2033 book. Traveling even a few hundred meters into the tunnels can be dangerous. Some of the dangers are defined; hordes of rats, mutated life forms that got into the tunnels from above, marauding humans who prey on their own kind. Some of the dangers are undefined. People, groups of people and caravans, evenly armed ones disappear without a trace, without a sound and no sign of struggles. The tunnel dwellers have dubbed the cause of these disappearances as the “Dark Ones”.

The website [...] has a virtual tour of all the stations mentioned in the book. It is a wonderful way to connect the descriptions of severely damaged places with what they looked like in reality. Since the story begins in our reality, the photos are showing the reality of the Metro universe before the nuclear event.

METRO 2033 is the quest Artyom undertakes to save the entire Metro system. He is tasked with this by a mysterious man who is only referred to as “Hunter”. There is a time element to the quest. As in life in 2016, life in post-apocalypse 2033 does not go as planned. Artyom tours, sometimes unwillingly, many of the various city-states that make up the Metro. It is a fascinating trip. The characters are real. The various ideologies of the city-states are believable. The unknowns in the dark tunnels ratchet up the suspense to terrifying levels. By the end of the book, I was deeply impressed by the world the author created and how much I came to care about the characters in it.

METRO 2033: The Gospel According to Artyom is a bridge to METRO 2034. It is only twenty-seven pages but well worth the $2.99 price. Artyom illustrates the consequences of the events the ended METRO 2033. But this short piece also gives significant background into his life before and during the apocalyptic event. It really is worth the price.

METRO 2034 begins not long after the end of METRO 2033. The main characters are the “Hunter” from the first book, a man called Homer who believes it is his vocation to write a history and chronicle of the Metro, and a teenage girl named Sasha who has been recently orphaned. Sasha’s father used to be one of the dictator’s of a Metro city-state until he and the girl were banished to an area that had little to no hope of survival. They did survive. Her father managed to live long enough for her to mature and learn to defend herself before his death. Hunter, Homer and Sasha come together in a collision of missions, Sasha’s to survive, Hunter and Homer to find out what happened to a station that no longer broadcasts or sends runners with news. Artyom does not have a large part in this story. He does not make an appearance until Chapter 10. Yet everything that is happening is a consequence of his actions in METRO 2033. The threat this time is not the Dark Ones. It is something much worse and something almost impossible to stop. As with the first book, the characters are fantastic and I grew to care about them. The action is non-stop.

The audiobooks of METRO 2033 and METRO 2034 are narrated by Rupert Degas. He is fantastic. His accent for the Russian speakers if marvelous. When simply narrating, not the dialogue, he has a very clear voice with an English accent. His female voices are very well done. I have since added several of his titles to my wish list.

The last book in the series METRO 2035 has not been released in English yet. I wonder if a social media campaign of begging to the author could help facilitate that happening.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2017
This review is for the novel Metro 2033 written by Dmitry Glukhovsky.

The video game based on this book is one of my three favorite video games of all time... the other two being Half-Life 2 series and the Stalker series. After many hours playing the video game I decided to read the novel. I was not sure what to expect. I am giving my impressions below.

I will also let you know how similar it is to the video game in a section below (COMPARISON OF BOOK AND VIDEO GAME.)

PLOT: The basic premise is that there has been a nuclear war and what's left of mankind is living in subways (probably throughout the world but nobody is quite sure.) Obviously it is the year 2033. This story takes place in the subways below Moscow.

Artyom, who was a young boy at the time of the nuclear war, is the main star of the story. He is grown up now and early on he relays the story to a mysterious stalker (stalker is a very loose translation, it real means more like guide/tracker/trail blazer/etc.), named Hunter, about how he opened up a way into the Metro as a young boy for whatever is out there. What's out there are mutants and/or animals that are mutated and maybe something else. Hunter, just back from his latest excursion, is getting prepared to go back out again when he gives Artyom a mission to complete. If he does not come back within a short period of time, he is to go to the Metro city of 'Polis' and seek out another Stalker, named Melnik, and give him a message. That's the basic premise but the story is much more involved than that. The story is about a journey, much the same way that Lord of the Rings is about a journey. You wouldn't summarize 'Lord of the Rings' by calling it a story about a group of halflings that take a trip across the continent to get to Mount Doom.

COMMENTS:
-Not all of the sentences make perfect sense. This novel is a translation from Russian and there are some inconsistencies. Occasionally something is lost in the translation.
-The book is fairly long, almost 500 pages in novel form. At times it does slow down but the story is always interesting. The characters spend a lot of time philosophizing about various aspects of life and life in the metro in general. While I find some of the discussions drag on at times, ultimately these discussions add to the story.

*****IMPORTANT***** A WORD ABOUT THE MAP OF THE METRO:
There are some good maps of the underground on the internet. Just use google. Some of them will show you the path. Others will give you the coordinates and alternate names of the stations. This is important because the map in the book does not always follow the names in the story. The map provided in the book is actually different than the current map of the Metro. In the story, Artyom carries with him an incomplete or dated map and discovers that there are other stations he doesn't know about. You will find yourself bewildered if you try to follow along with Artyom and the map provided in the book. So do yourself a favor and have one ready when you are ready to read this book!

COMPARISON OF BOOK AND VIDEO GAME: The main story is roughly the same in the book and game but in reality it is not the same at all. At it's very basic, it is the same story, but how you get to the main locations is very different.

Imagine... if you will... that two people were given the same outline of a story. They are then given a map of the Metro with the path that Artyom must take. They are also given the basic personalities of the characters in the story. Then those two people each write a story on the information given to them. What you would get would be two stories that would sound the same if you summarized them but the 'meat' of the story would be quite different. That's kind of like how I would describe the difference in the story between the book and video game.

The Summary: You start out at the same location in both the book and video game. The story starts the same and your mission is the same. Hunter arrives early on and tells Artyom that he is going back out. If he does not come back within a short period of time then Artyom is to leave his home and get to Polis, find Melnik and give him a message. The story of the Dark Ones, the secret underground railroad and the ending is also pretty close to the same (though not quite as adventurous as in the video game). But just about everything else in between is at the same time similar and very different.

The Metro Underground: It is the same as in the video game. The big difference is that you will visit more locations and spend more time at each of them. As I noted above, Artyom is carrying a map that is not up to date. This is the map that you see in your book. You will find the true map online by doing a simple search.

The Locations: You will visit most or all of the locations you visited in the video game and spend more time at each of them. In addition, you will visit more locations in the book. Obviously these locations are described in more detail.

The Characters: You will meet most, if not all, of the characters that you meet in the video game.
The characters personalities that you meet in the video game will have the same personalities as in the book. You will meet many more characters in the book. Some of the characters you meet will leave you wondering if they are real or imaginary. It's possible that some of these characters are products of the Underground's mysterious machinations.
-Be prepared for some lengthy discussions. Some of them are very philosophical.
-The discussions and/or experiences that Artyom has with the characters that he encounters will often be different than in the video game.

The Factions: If you have played the 'Metro 2033' video games, you will know that there are a bunch of different factions in the underground. In fact, there are quite a few more that actually exist. You don't see them all in the video games and some of the factions are only talked about in the books. Among those you will encounter will be mostly the same that you meet in the video game. Hansa (Leaders of the ring stations), the Fourth Reich and the Red Line are among those you will meet (but not the only ones).

The Dark Ones/The Creatures: The story of the Dark Ones is essentially the same in the novel as in the video game. Most of the creatures that you encounter are very similar to what is depicted in the video game. You may meet a few other unusual beings.

HOW ABOUT THE SEQUEL?:
After reading this you will be ready for the next book, 'Metro 2034'. Artyom is a very minor character in 'Metro 2034.' Instead, we have a new lead character, an old man who was a train engineer before the war. Hunter, even though he drives the story, is in reality, just a minor character in Metro '2033'. He is a major character in 'Metro 2034', however he will seem quite different. You will be seeing a lot of him and that is a good thing. Hunter has been badly disfigured but somehow seems almost superhuman in this novel. This story, as of yet, has not had a game made based on it. Neither, 'Metro: Last Light' or 'Metro: Exodus' are based on this novel.

'Metro 2035' is the book that the second 'Metro 2033' video game, 'Metro 2033: Last Light' is based on.

CONCLUSIONS/RECOMMENDATIONS: 5 stars. Definitely one of the best post-apocalyptic stories written.

I strongly recommend this book for fans of post-apocalyptic fiction. It is one of the best. I rarely read a book twice. I did so with this one.

If you are reading this because you are a fan of the video games and you are thinking of reading the book, I would strongly recommend you do so. I had the book on my shelf for quite some time before I finally read it. The dark, oppressive tone of the game is the same in the novel. It will draw you in the same way the game does.

Highly recommended for fans of the video game.
Highly recommended for fans of science fiction in general.

Aside from the two sequels as of the time of this review (Metro 2034 and Metro 2035), there are also numerous other novels by other authors that have been written that take place in different parts of the world based in the same universe. Also as of the time of this review, unfortunately, none of these have been released in English.
There has been one graphic novel that I know of based on the Metro Universe called 'The Outpost' and it takes place in the United States.
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Top reviews from other countries

Verónica Cortés Huerta
5.0 out of 5 stars Pasta gruesa !!
Reviewed in Mexico on February 6, 2024
Llegó a tiempo, recomiendo al vendedor
steven m.
5.0 out of 5 stars A must
Reviewed in Canada on January 26, 2024
Great book
Rudra Shankar Majumder
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice
Reviewed in India on September 27, 2023
This is a good read. The translation and the occassional spelling mistakes could have been avoided. I finished it once and I will read it one more time.
Honeymouth
5.0 out of 5 stars 10/10
Reviewed in Italy on November 27, 2022
purtroppo traduzione scarsa in molti casi ma libri ottimi
Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Best book I have ever read
Reviewed in Brazil on January 4, 2021
Best book I ever Read! It's like a post apocalyptic lord of the rings, with a great tone of philosophy and horror, all in the same book. And I mean lord of the ring by the descriptions the author gives, you feel like reading a movie, you dive into the world of metro, the adventure in itself has a whole other tone, but it is brilliant in it's own way.
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