What I felt after reading "All Systems Red" by Martha Wells

What an enjoyable cozy scifi adventure! The story centers around a security bot with a self-hacked governor module, who refers to itself privately as “Murderbot” and likes to watch serials and movies surreptitiously in it’s free time. The socially awkward bot repeatedly assures us that it definitely does not care about humans. When the team of scientists which have hired Murderbot are confronted by life threatening situations, it goes out of it’s way to save their lives if only just so it is not labelled as an incompetent. Over the course of the story we observe how it’s relationship with the humans in the group develops and changes. Murderbot’s at times hilarious internal monologues concerning “her humans” were my favourite parts of the book. So those of you who have read the book, how did you like it? How are the rest of the books in the series?

AFKBRBChocolate,

A little late to the party but I recently finished the fifth book. All of them are great so far, well worth the time.

Bebo,

Oh that’s good to know. Can’t wait to dig into this series.

seaQueue, (edited )
@seaQueue@lemmy.world avatar

They’re finally selling an ebook collection including all of the novellas on the major platforms too. I’ve been waiting for it to go on sale. I’ve already read them but liked them enough to want to buy a copy.

nodimetotie,

I read it because it is pretty high up on the Good Reads Sci-Fi list. It was a short and interesting read, the premise feels fresh. The writing was good, I did enjoy sarcastic remarks by the murderbot. But I was not super excited to continue reading the series. Somehow, the premise of a murderbot felt like glorifying social awkwardness and isolation and that did not resonate with me. Probably not the most popular opinion, but that’s how the book made feel, anyway.

uriel238,
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

The second novella involves a protracted conversation with a shipboard AI who is even more detatched from humanity than Sec-Unit. Keep going.

Bebo,

That sounds interesting

JoeClu,
@JoeClu@lemmy.world avatar

Ive read the first few so far. The next book on my list looks to be a full length novel.

I find your reference of “her humans” is interesting. I never thought of muderbot as a her. Perhaps I missed an important line somewhere in the story?

I think your review is right on. You captured exactly what it’s like. I look forward to reading the next book.

chewiedies,

I thought of muderbot as a “her” as well. I think at some point it’s described as having a female appearance without its armor on.

Eq0,

I never noticed that I also thought of “her”. I read the book a while ago, so I don’t remember your reference, but I remember finding it refreshing to find a robot that was “obviously female” instead of undefined therefore male.

clockwork_octopus,

I never thought of Murderbot as a her, either. Possibly this is because I listened to All Systems Red as an audiobook, and the narrator was male, but even without that, it just seems a little more masculine to me. (It? Seems weird to call it an it. Maybe a they instead)

Not that it matters, of course. I just find people’s projections fascinating, is all!

MentalEdge,
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz avatar

Murderbot does have a conversation in one of the later books, and states that it prefers to be referred to as “sec-unit” as a name, dropping “the” from before the word.

The rest of the characters typically refers to sec-unit, as sec-unit, from that point on.

klemptor,

I think Martha Wells really tried to make SecUnit genderless, but because the books are written in the first person by a female author, SecUnit ends up sounding pretty female to me.

AFKBRBChocolate,

I think this is it. Murderbot seems to talk about itself in actively gender neutral terms (it doesn’t even have genitals!), and “it” is the most used pronoun, but like you said, it’s a female author writing for a non-gendered character - not surprising it sometimes seems female.

wendymetcalfe,
@wendymetcalfe@mastodon.social avatar

@AFKBRBChocolate @klemptor I've never imagined Murderbot as female. To me, it's always seemed closer to male.

AFKBRBChocolate,

I was a couple books in before I started thinking maybe it’s female, or maybe truly genderless. I even found myself going back and looking at the covers to see if there were clues. I’m still thinking actively genderless.

Spluk42,

It could be that I listened to them on audiobook but I kinda pictured an Arnold/Terminator kinda person.

StorageAware,

This is my favorite series. I also liked the various other books as they’re all different “mini-stories” but do connect. And the audiobooks are also pretty good, the narrator does a great job!

Cuttlefishcarl,

If you liked the first one you’ll like them all! Murderbot was such a fun read all the way through.

marsmooncow,

I loved the rest of the books, think it really picked up in the second and third and is great by the current one. I found it laugh out loud funny in places .I would highly recommend you continue with the series as they just get better and better .

zipsglacier,

Chiming in to agree; they get even better.

chewiedies,

Murderbot’s relationship with ART is great. Those were some pretty great laugh out loud moments.

Bebo,

That sounds good!

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