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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/BioShock_Rapture_Cover_9031.jpg]]
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3''[=BioShock=]: Rapture'' is a tie-in {{Prequel}} to the video games ''VideoGame/{{BioShock|1}}'' and ''VideoGame/BioShock2''. It was written by John Shirley and released by Tor Books.
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5The novel goes into detail about the numerous events mentioned in the games' ApocalypticLogs. After UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, billionaire tycoon Andrew Ryan designs the underwater city of Rapture to escape; not just from the looming threat of atomic devastation, but from the control of those he percieves as parasites who unjustly steal the profits of the working man (while, at the same time, denouncing the protests of workers' unions as "leeches" demanding a handout). Seeking to prove his personal values effective, Ryan invites the best and brightest from various fields to live with him in this underwater utopia--chief among them Bill [=McDonagh=], a former low-rent plumber who was elevated to Ryan's chief building engineer when the latter was impressed with his work ethic.
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7At first, things in Rapture seem to be going exactly as Ryan envisioned--a society free of taxes, with artists and scientists alike able to pursue their research without having to deal with the constraints of government. But several problems soon arise: an increase in population leads to a need for more housing; when a less educated group of people are brought in to build new housing, they soon find themselves unable to find more work and are thus left to fend for themselves. This creates a large underclass, many of whom are desperate to make ends meet--desperate enough, even, to join the underground smuggling ring which imports forbidden items from the surface world. Resources run short when the initial residents do not feel like being totally self-sufficent. A lack of regulation on industrial process causes chemical leaks which slowly compromise Rapture's structural integrity.
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9As civil unrest grows in the midst of all of these circumstances, the situation is made worse with the discovery and widespread distribution of [[PsychoSerum ADAM]], a genetic modifier which grants its users extraordinary powers, but at the price of addiction and mutation.
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11Eventually Rapture erupts into civil war, and the city falls apart until it reaches the shattered condition in which [[VideoGame/BioShock1 the player will later discover it]]. The book follows this decline into anarchy, told from several perspectives along the way: Bill [=McDonagh=], as he watches the utopia he helped build lose its way; Frank Fontaine, cutthroat gangster who seeks to exploit Rapture's secrets [[ItsAllAboutMe for his own criminal gain]]; Chief Sullivan, the beleagured head of Rapture's security as he tries to keep doing his job in an increasingly-deranged environment; Bridget Tenebaum, the brilliant-yet-troubled scientist who discovered ADAM in the first place and [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone later comes to regret her actions]]; and Andrew Ryan himself, as he [[NeverMyFault stubbornly clings to his beliefs]] even as it becomes clear that they are flawed, and causing Rapture to steadily collapse...
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13!!This novel has examples of:
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15* AdaptationalHeroism: Dr. Sofia Lamb, the BigBad of ''[=BioShock=] 2'', is depicted here as showing a greater degree of empathy towards her followers compared to her more detached attitude in the game to come.
16* AllMythsAreTrue: During a meeting of Rapture's council, one of the experts suggests that the reason Plasmids work is because they're unlocking long-dormant genes that gave humans similar abilities in the past, thus explaining the legends of things like genies and magicians.
17* AmbiguouslyGay: Sander Cohen's possible homosexuality is alluded to several times throughout the book--his lavish praise and description of his male proteges, his rather dismissive opinion of Jasmine Jolene, and the whole DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything situation below all point to this being the case.
18* ApocalypticLog: We find out it was Ryan who persuaded everyone to keep recording audio dairies, [[{{Irony}} so that generations would see how awesome Rapture was and would end up becoming.]]
19** In a sense, the novel itself could be one for the story of Rapture.
20* AscendedExtra: Bill [=McDonagh=], a secondary PosthumousCharacter from the first game's diaries, who is as close to a hero as the book gets.
21** Roland Wallace, who makes a brief appearance in an audio diary during the first game, has more appearances in the book, being a member of Rapture's maintenance crew alongside Bill.
22** During the first game, Anton Kincaide is mentioned to be the creator of the Rapture Metro in a loading screen. Here, he receives far more characterization, including a role on Rapture's Council and further insight into aspects of his personality.
23* AssholeVictim: The book has a few over the course of its run. A few notable examples include:
24** The cutthroat owner of a grocery store drives a rival grocer out of business by buying the local trash collection outfit and price-gouging the rival for far more than he can afford (causing the garbage to rot and drive away customers), gloating about it when Ryan refuses to help. It's hard to pity him when said rival takes a gun and shoots him.
25** Greavy, one of Rapture's city council, speaks quite dismissively of the misfortunes of the working class who are suffering in Rapture. He's practically ''asking'' for death from Splicers, which is exactly what happens.
26** [[spoiler: Cavendish, a DirtyCop of the highest order, gets gunned down by fellow officer Karlosky.]]
27* AteHisGun: In the aforementioned grocery store incident, the victimized store owner turns the gun on himself after shooting the rival who ruined his business. [[spoiler: Later, it's implied that Sullivan does the same thing after killing Anna Culpepper.]]
28* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Bill tries to escape and fails, resulting in his execution, but his wife and daughter make it to the surface to live a happy life.]]
29* BlackmailIsSuchAnUglyWord: Implied In the last meeting between Fontaine and Ryan, as Fontaine subtly tells Ryan to stay out of his way, or he'll make him and Ryan knows exactly what's going on.
30* BodyHorror: Attention is called to the deformities that Splicers suffer from, along with the destructive effects that Plasmids cause when used on their victims. And that's not counting the experimental subjects that Plasmids were tested out on, of which special mention goes to the... ''thing'' in the Special Studies room. Even the normally unflappable Fontaine is horrified by this monstrosity and orders Suchong and Tannenbaum to not only kill it, but ''incinerate the entire room.''
31-->Clinging to the walls opposite Fontaine was something that might've once been human. It was as if someone had taken human flesh and made it as malleable as clay--bones and flesh made pliable--and [[MeatMoss plastered it onto the wall]].
32* BrainsAndBondage: Humorously revealed as the case with Tenenbaum after it was shown Tenenbaum and Fontaine entered a romantic relationship with each other after their partnership. Tenenbaum is revealed to be a masochist who does not like to be touched but still wants to be touched, dreaming of a man who can take her forcibly during the act. She was only being able to copulate with Fontaine if she offered some resistance while wearing a blindfold during the act.
33* BrokenPedestal: Andrew Ryan becomes this to Bill [=McDonagh=] by the novel's climax, as he steadily becomes the same kind of corrupt totalitarian leader that he built Rapture to escape. [[spoiler: However, Bill still can't bring himself to shoot his former benefactor in the end. It comes back to bite him.]]
34* CallForward: Pretty much every character except Andrew Ryan makes a comment about some flaw in Rapture that will eventually make it the mess Jack finds it to be in by the time of the game.
35** When Bill [=McDonagh=] first meets Sander Cohen, Cohen invites Ryan to a gallery show specializing in [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tableau_vivant tableau vivant art]] that he is holding in Greenwich Village. This, perhaps, is the precursor to the [[WaxMuseumMorgue host of plaster-coated corpses]] that the player later finds in Fort Frolic.
36** One of Gorland's former aliases is "[[MasterOfDisguise Wang]]", referencing Fontaine's late-game boast that he "was even a Chinaman for six months".
37** When discussing the potential of subliminal brainwashing and hypnotic commands, Fontaine asks Dr. Suchong if it would be possible to command a kid to snap his beloved puppy's neck. In one of the audio logs in the game, [[spoiler: you learn that yes, Suchong was able to do just that.]]
38** In the novel's climax, Bill's family is menaced by a member of the Saturnine cult that's popped up in Arcadia--the initial Houdini Splicers that the player will face in the first game.
39** We see Sofia Lamb's rise to power as she takes control of [[TheAlcatraz Persephone]].
40* CanonForeigner: Elaine and Sophie [=McDonagh=] have no counterpart in the games, presumably so that the reader will have at least a couple of major characters in the book whose fate is genuinely uncertain.
41** Constables Cavendish, Redgrave, and Harker do not appear in the games. Similarly, Ryan's Russian bodyguard Karlosky has no in-game counterpart.
42* CassandraTruth: At the novel's conclusion, [[spoiler: Elaine takes her daughter to see a doctor in New York City, the girl gushing on how amazing the surface world is compared to her childhood growing up in an advanced city on the bottom of the ocean. The doctor simply chuckles at what an imagination the girl has as Elaine smiles]].
43* ChildHater: Suchong makes his distaste for children readily apparent. This hatred stems from his childhood experiences as the son of a poor servant, as he was bullied by the children of the wealthy man his family served.
44* DarkAndTroubledPast: Andrew Ryan, whose views of altruism and workers' benefits are colored by his memories of his uncle and aunt being mercilessly gunned down by the Red Guard while trying to flee Russia; he attributes their deaths to the October Revolution and all of its "parasites".
45** Frank Fontaine also gets hints of this. What glimpses we get into his past suggest that he grew up in an OrphanageOfFear, then had to scrape and struggle while living on the streets as a kid. With a hard childhood like that, it's small wonder he grew up into a ruthless con man.
46* DeadPersonImpersonation: [[spoiler: Frank the conman kills the ''real'' Frank Fontaine so he can steal his identity and fishing business, which he uses to get into Rapture.]]
47* DecoyLeader: [[spoiler: Frank gets Steinman to make one of his henchmen to look like him so he will take the bullet in the upcoming raid and Frank can go underground as Atlas.]]
48* DidntThinkThisThrough: Andrew Ryan, full stop. He recruits people to a new underwater city, actively plans for it to be a dog-eat-dog society where only the strongest and most ruthless will prosper, forbids anyone to leave for any reason, yet seems totally unprepared for the possibility that some (or most) will fail, become ''de facto'' prisoners of Rapture, feel resentful and eventually rebel.
49* DirtyCop: [[spoiler: Cavendish, who is implied to have started the process of kidnapping the children of lower-class people to turn into Little Sisters. Sullivan characterizes Cavendish as one of the "bad eggs" that beats prisoners.]]
50** [[spoiler: Sullivan]] himself becomes this, as he extrajudicially murders [[spoiler: Anna Culpepper by drowning her]] late into the book. It’s implied that he [[spoiler: later commits suicide out of guilt.]]
51** The Rapture Constabulary can be considered this in general. Sullivan tells Ryan that the constables would likely arrest anyone Ryan told them to, contravening Rapture's ideals of ultimate freedom. Later in the book, a constable is mentioned to have sold a wounded splicer to Dr. Steinman for his cruel, ADAM-crazed experiments.
52** In a different vein, it’s mentioned that a group of constables betrayed Andrew Ryan by aiding Atlas and his followers in attacking the upper-class New Year's party at the Kashmir Restaurant. Constable Cavendish is mentioned to have shot these traitorous officers.
53* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Martin Finnegan's first Plasmid-injecting experience, courtesy of Sander Cohen.
54* DoomedByCanon: [[spoiler: Every character except Elaine and Sophie [=McDonagh=].]]
55* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler: Mariska and Samuel Lutz after seeing their daughter as a Little Sister via overdose, along with Sullivan who shoots himself over the guilt of killing Anna Culpepper.]]
56** Likewise the shopkeeper who has his business being run into the ground by a rival who also owns the trash collection company and thus refuses to pick up the trash from the former's store to drive him out of business. When Ryan refuses to help, the disillusioned shopkeeper shoots the rival, then turns the gun on himself.
57* EstablishingCharacterMoment: ''Several.''
58** Andrew Ryan is first introduced railing against miners on strike, then expressing his dread over the looming threat of atomic devastation.
59** Bill [=McDonagh=] morosely considers his poor lot in life, but encourages himself to carry on nonetheless as he enters Andrew Ryan's apartment to fix the plumbing.
60** Chief Sullivan enters Ryan's office after a long day, and just wants a drink and the chance to put his feet up; but nonetheless delivers his report to "the Great Man" (his private term for Andrew Ryan, which he himself uses half-seriously, half in jest).
61** Frank Fontaine is conning a guy out of his business while using an alias.
62** Sander Cohen is starring in a show of questionable quality, and is described as craving the spotlight whenever he can get it.
63** Sofia Lamb dispassionately asks some piercing questions about Rapture to Andrew Ryan.
64** Tenenbaum approaches the fisheries for lab specimens while recalling how her last job ended when she [[WorstAid performed an injection]] [[GroinAttack on a man's more delicate region]].
65** Dr. Steinman absently reflects on how he "hears the voice of Aphrodite" while considering his latest plastic surgery, wishing he could operate further to satisfy his sense of perfectionist aesthetics.
66* EvenEvilHasStandards: Fontaine is at first genuinely creeped out and physically sickened by the methods Suchong and Tenenbaum come up with for producing more ADAM. He gets over it when he realizes how much money can be made, however.
67** During their conversation in Ryan's office, Fontaine is very offended when Ryan implies that perhaps the reason he's set up the orphanages around Rapture and pays the girls much more attention than the boys [[MistakenForPedophile is because he's sexually abusing them.]] He quickly snaps at him and says that he only likes fully-grown women.
68** Ryan is faintly appalled by the tactics a grocery store owner uses to drive his competitor out of business (gaining a monopoly on trash collection in the area, then price gouging his competitor for far more than he can afford, causing the trash to rot outside the guy's store). But he's not willing to do anything about it - that's not The Rapture Way, after all.
69* EyeScream: Poor Blinky--at least, that's what Sander Cohen calls him, while putting out a cigar ''in his eye''...
70* ExactWords: When Karlosky catches Bill and his family trying to escape Rapture, Bill asks if his orders are to capture and kill everyone or ''just'' Bill. Karlosky eventually agrees to let Bill's family leave, but he can't do the same for Bill.
71* FaceDeathWithDignity: [[spoiler: Bill [=McDonagh=] smiles as he's shot point-blank.]]
72* TheFettered: Bill throughout the book. He sees everything going wrong, but can't bring himself to turn against Andrew Ryan--partly out of loyalty to the man who gave him a chance, and mostly out of concern for what'll happen to his family if he's arrested.
73* FirstTimeInTheSun: [[spoiler: Sophie [=McDonagh=].]]
74* ForegoneConclusion: Rapture is not going to last. It even says so on the back of the book.
75* {{Foreshadowing}}: A lot of it is to later events in the story as well as the games
76* FourLinesAllWaiting: The narrative switches between Andrew Ryan, Bill [=McDonagh=], Frank Fontaine, Sander Cohen, Brigid Tenenbaum, Sofia Lamb, Sander Cohen, Dr. Steinman, Sullivan, and occasionally minor characters.
77* GilliganCut: When hearing about an emergency involving sabotage, Andrew Ryan guesses that Bill is already dealing with it. Cut to Bill (knee-deep in water) wondering how on earth he's going to deal with the emergency.
78* GunsAkimbo: [[spoiler:Frank Fontaine's BodyDouble]] goes down in a raid organized by Andrew Ryan with a gun on each hand.
79* GuttedLikeAFish: [[spoiler: Poor Diane, courtesy of Frank Fontaine when she discovers his secret identity.]]
80* HarmlessFreezing: Averted when Martin Finnegan uses his freezing Plasmid. Attention is called to the way the victims' throats lock up, and their eye sockets are packed with ice.
81* HaveAGayOldTime: Bill [=McDonagh=], upon meeting the flamboyant Sander Cohen, regards him in his inner monologue as a "queer sort of duck". Definitely intentional, as Cohen turns out to be exactly what he appears to modern audiences.
82* HealingFactor: The Little Sisters. Indeed, a direct infusion of ADAM seems to induce this in someone who's badly injured; Bill considers finding some for Greavy when the latter is mortally wounded.
83* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler: Bill at end, asking that his wife and daughter go free since Ryan [[ExactWords only ordered for him to be arrested]].]]
84* HonorBeforeReason: As Rapture begins to turn into a dictatorship, Bill [=McDonagh=] admits what's happening, but can't bring himself to abandon Andrew Ryan. [[spoiler: It doesn't last forever, though, and he finally decides to try and escape with his family.]]
85* {{Hypocrite}}: Andrew Ryan's hypocrisy grows throughout the story. Even at the very start it’s revealed that Ryan founded his empire on oil which he discovered purely by luck, even though he’s so insistent on self-sufficiency. He abhors taxes, but puts a surcharge on the oxygen produced by his park when he needs to build more capital to compete with Frank Fontaine's rising business. He takes over Fontaine Fisheries by force. In the later stages of the book he’s even using black market goods like pork and smoking cigars.
86* INeedAFreakingDrink: Said throughout the book, mostly by Karlosky but also by Sullivan and Bill.
87* InformedAbility: In-universe, Sander Cohen. Andrew Ryan loves Cohen's work and considers him a fellow genius and kindred spirit, yet everyone else considers him a mediocre talent at best, actively annoying and/or creepy at worst.
88* MercyKill: In a way. [[spoiler: After he's captured, it was ordered that Bill be pinned to a wall first then killed. However, Karlosky decides to give Bill a quick death out of respect for their friendship.]]
89* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Security chief Sullivan goes through this after Ryan orders him [[spoiler: to drown dissenter Anna Culpepper in her bathtub. He kills himself shortly after he confesses to Bill.]]
90** We see the start of Tenenbaum's attempt to redeem herself when [[spoiler: she rescues several Little Sisters and hides them away.]]
91* MythologyGag: In a meta sense. Fontaine has a Plasmid that allows teleportation, but pulls it from the market because it makes its users more unstable than the rest. [[WhatCouldHaveBeen There WAS going to be a Teleportation Plasmid in the game, but it was cut for scripting purposes.]]
92** This may also be a CallForward to the Houdini Splicers, who can [[SmokeOut vanish into thin air]] [[OffscreenTeleportation before appearing somewhere else]]. They're also easily [[EliteMook the most dangerous variety of Splicers]], being able to [[KamehameHadoken toss fireballs around]] in addition to pulling off their vanishing acts, [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity and they're at ''least'' as unstable as any other Splicer]] [[AfterTheEnd in post-Civil War Rapture]].
93** It could be a CallForward to the Unstable Teleport Plasmid, which is a MindScrew from ''VideoGame/BioShock2''.
94* OneSteveLimit: If Sophie and Sofia are close enough to qualify as the same name, the book defies this trope by introducing Bill [=McDonagh=]'s daughter.
95* OnlySaneMan: Bill [=McDonagh=], the closest thing this book has to a protagonist. Especially apparent when all the other characters start going from deluded to insane. Even moreso his wife Elaine, who points out problems with Rapture right at the beginning.
96* PoliceAreUseless:
97** The FBI and OSS, despite spending years and a lot of effort trying to learn about Andrew Ryan's secret project, never found out. It speaks volumes of their apparent incompetence when Frank managed to find out that Ryan was building a city beneath the sea ''while prentending to be a Federal Agent'', while neither of the real agents ever did. For that matter, Agent Voss, despite knowing that Frank had a murky past, [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter went to the latter in the hopes that he would help him]].
98** The constables are a downplayed example. At the beginning, they were very competent, but as the years went by, and both corruption in Rapture and Ryan's paranoia grew, they slowly went from being keepers of order to becoming Ryan's private army. Around two thirds of the story, some of them even started kidnapping children under Ryan's orders in order for them to become new Little Sisters, and others were being bribed by either Fontaine or Cohen.
99* PrisonRiot: Sofia's takeover of Persephone.
100* {{Pun}}:
101-->'''Andrew Ryan''': I'm going to show you a marvel taking shape southwest of Iceland. And I promise you that you will be...enraptured.
102* PunctuatedForEmphasis: During Ryan and Fontaine's meeting
103--> '''Fontaine''': What I'm here for really is to tell you that if you leave me alone, I'll leave you alone. All that recruiting you're guessing about won't come and bite you in the ass. ''If. You Back. The fuck.'' '''Off!'''
104* RealisticDictionIsUnrealistic: Not only do some characters have a few "um"s and pauses in their sentences, but its revealed that most of the characters except Andrew Ryan have a few lines that like to throw out. Some of the audiodiaries are revealed to be polished performances of previous conversation (the characters side of it anyway) and stories they frequently tell. A few characters "quote" single sentences either from the their own diaries or even monologues in the games, implying they have a few practiced lines they like to throw out when appropriate. For example: Sophia Lamb tells Ryan upon first coming to Rapture: "Were the modern world a patient in my care, I would diagnose it suicidal," which she chronologically uses later in a tape meant for Eleanor.
105* SarcasmBlind: Fontaine discovers through Tenenbaum and Suchong that more ADAM can be made by implanting the slug that produces the substance into little girls. Faced with the obvious hurdle of finding girls to host the slug, he sarcastically asks if they can order them from a catalog. Suchong doesn’t pick up on the sarcasm, and remarks that he hasn’t heard of any such catalog.
106* ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem: Andrew Ryan eventually feels that only other people have to follow the rules of Rapture.
107* ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight: [[spoiler: Diane [=McClintock=] and Bill [=McDonagh=]]] both decide to go against Andrew Ryan because their consciences tell them to.
108* StartOfDarkness: For Rapture itself, and debatably Andrew Ryan.
109** For Ryan, it could also be him witnessing his uncle getting murdered by Bolsheviks.
110* ThisIsWhatTheBuildingWillLookLike: As they are flying across the North Atlantic, Ryan reveals his project of building a city under the sea to [=McDonagh=] by showing him a model of it.
111* TrainingThePeacefulVillagers: Bill to Elaine as more splicers start showing up in the city. It comes in handy during the infamous New Years Eve party.
112* VillainousFriendship: The book reveals that [[MadDoctor Dr. Steinman]] and [[MadArtist Sander Cohen]] were quite chummy.
113* VodkaDrunkenski: Karlosky, who is always eager for a drink, but sober when on duty.
114* WithDueRespect: Bill to Ryan near the end. It's a mark of how unstable Ryan has become since the beginning, where he openly invited Bill to criticize him.
115* WhatCouldPossiblyGoWrong: Ryan's, and, ironically, Fontaine's, entire reasoning throughout the entire book.
116** Fontaine, at least, is pretty certain from the beginning that Rapture is going to collapse. However, he sees a mighty profit to be made in said collapse, if he plays his cards right.

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