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Hugo and Nebula Award winner. A self-aware security android hacks its governor module and investigates when a neighbouring mission goes dark in this science fiction novella. Now an Apple Original series starring Alexander Skarsgård. - Opens the same content in full screenSee more
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Yes, talk to Murderbot about its feelings. The idea was so painful I dropped to 97 percent efficiency.
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What’s it about?
Hugo and Nebula Award winner. A self-aware security android hacks its governor module and investigates when a neighbouring mission goes dark in this science fiction novella. Now an Apple Original series starring Alexander Skarsgård. -
Popular highlight
Yes, talk to Murderbot about its feelings. The idea was so painful I dropped to 97 percent efficiency.
6,733 Kindle readers highlighted this
Book details
- Print length154 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publishertor.com
- Publication date2 May 2017
- Dimensions12.7 x 0.94 x 20.32 cm
- ISBN-109780765397539
- ISBN-13978-0765397539
Winner of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Award for Best Novella
Winner of the Alex Award
A New York Times and USA Today Bestseller
Now an Apple Original series from Academy Award nominees Paul Weitz and Chris Weitz and starring Emmy Award winner Alexander Skarsgård.
A murderous android discovers itself in All Systems Red, a tense science fiction adventure by Martha Wells that interrogates the roots of consciousness through Artificial Intelligence.
“As a heartless killing machine, I was a complete failure.”
In a corporate-dominated spacefaring future, planetary missions must be approved and supplied by the Company. Exploratory teams are accompanied by Company-supplied security androids, for their own safety.
But in a society where contracts are awarded to the lowest bidder, safety isn’t a primary concern.
On a distant planet, a team of scientists are conducting surface tests, shadowed by their Company-supplied ‘droid―a self-aware SecUnit that has hacked its own governor module, and refers to itself (though never out loud) as “Murderbot.” Scornful of humans, all it really wants is to be left alone long enough to figure out who it is.
But when a neighboring mission goes dark, it's up to the scientists and their Murderbot to get to the truth.
The Murderbot Diaries
All Systems Red
Artificial Condition
Rogue Protocol
Exit Strategy
Network Effect
Fugitive Telemetry
System Collapse
Review
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
All Systems Red
The Murderbot Diaries
By Martha Wells, Lee HarrisTom Doherty Associates
Copyright © 2017 Martha WellsAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7653-9753-9
CHAPTER 1
I COULD HAVE BECOME a mass murderer after I hacked my governor module, but then I realized I could access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on the company satellites. It had been well over 35,000 hours or so since then, with still not much murdering, but probably, I don't know, a little under 35,000 hours of movies, serials, books, plays, and music consumed. As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure.
I was also still doing my job, on a new contract, and hoping Dr. Volescu and Dr. Bharadwaj finished their survey soon so we could get back to the habitat and I could watch episode 397 of Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon.
I admit I was distracted. It was a boring contract so far and I was thinking about backburnering the status alert channel and trying to access music on the entertainment feed without HubSystem logging the extra activity. It was trickier to do it in the field than it was in the habitat.
This assessment zone was a barren stretch of coastal island, with low, flat hills rising and falling and thick greenish-black grass up to my ankles, not much in the way of flora or fauna, except a bunch of different-sized birdlike things and some puffy floaty things that were harmless as far as we knew. The coast was dotted with big bare craters, one of which Bharadwaj and Volescu were taking samples in. The planet had a ring, which from our current position dominated the horizon when you looked out to sea. I was looking at the sky and mentally poking at the feed when the bottom of the crater exploded.
I didn't bother to make a verbal emergency call. I sent the visual feed from my field camera to Dr. Mensah's, and jumped down into the crater. As I scrambled down the sandy slope, I could already hear Mensah over the emergency comm channel, yelling at someone to get the hopper in the air now. They were about ten kilos away, working on another part of the island, so there was no way they were going to get here in time to help.
Conflicting commands filled my feed but I didn't pay attention. Even if I hadn't borked my own governor module, the emergency feed took priority, and it was chaotic, too, with the automated HubSystem wanting data and trying to send me data I didn't need yet and Mensah sending me telemetry from the hopper. Which I also didn't need, but it was easier to ignore than HubSystem simultaneously demanding answers and trying to supply them.
In the middle of all that, I hit the bottom of the crater. I have small energy weapons built into both arms, but the one I went for was the big projectile weapon clamped to my back. The hostile that had just exploded up out of the ground had a really big mouth, so I felt I needed a really big gun.
I dragged Bharadwaj out of its mouth and shoved myself in there instead, and discharged my weapon down its throat and then up toward where I hoped the brain would be. I'm not sure if that all happened in that order; I'd have to replay my own field camera feed. All I knew was that I had Bharadwaj, and it didn't, and it had disappeared back down the tunnel.
She was unconscious and bleeding through her suit from massive wounds in her right leg and side. I clamped the weapon back into its harness so I could lift her with both arms. I had lost the armor on my left arm and a lot of the flesh underneath, but my nonorganic parts were still working. Another burst of commands from the governor module came through and I backburnered it without bothering to decode them. Bharadwaj, not having nonorganic parts and not as easily repaired as me, was definitely a priority here and I was mainly interested in what the MedSystem was trying to tell me on the emergency feed. But first I needed to get her out of the crater.
During all this, Volescu was huddled on the churned up rock, losing his shit, not that I was unsympathetic. I was far less vulnerable in this situation than he was and I wasn't exactly having a great time either. I said, "Dr. Volescu, you need to come with me now."
He didn't respond. MedSystem was advising a tranq shot and blah blah blah, but I was clamping one arm on Dr. Bharadwaj's suit to keep her from bleeding out and supporting her head with the other, and despite everything I only have two hands. I told my helmet to retract so he could see my human face. If the hostile came back and bit me again, this would be a bad mistake, because I did need the organic parts of my head. I made my voice firm and warm and gentle, and said, "Dr. Volescu, it's gonna be fine, okay? But you need to get up and come help me get her out of here."
That did it. He shoved to his feet and staggered over to me, still shaking. I turned my good side toward him and said, "Grab my arm, okay? Hold on."
He managed to loop his arm around the crook of my elbow and I started up the crater towing him, holding Bharadwaj against my chest. Her breathing was rough and desperate and I couldn't get any info from her suit. Mine was torn across my chest so I upped the warmth on my body, hoping it would help. The feed was quiet now, Mensah having managed to use her leadership priority to mute everything but MedSystem and the hopper, and all I could hear on the hopper feed was the others frantically shushing each other.
The footing on the side of the crater was lousy, soft sand and loose pebbles, but my legs weren't damaged and I got up to the top with both humans still alive. Volescu tried to collapse and I coaxed him away from the edge a few meters, just in case whatever was down there had a longer reach than it looked.
I didn't want to put Bharadwaj down because something in my abdomen was severely damaged and I wasn't sure I could pick her up again. I ran my field camera back a little and saw I had gotten stabbed with a tooth, or maybe a cilia. Did I mean a cilia or was that something else? They don't give murderbots decent education modules on anything except murdering, and even those are the cheap versions. I was looking it up in HubSystem's language center when the little hopper landed nearby. I let my helmet seal and go opaque as it settled on the grass.
We had two standard hoppers: a big one for emergencies and this little one for getting to the assessment locations. It had three compartments: one big one in the middle for the human crew and two smaller ones to each side for cargo, supplies, and me. Mensah was at the controls. I started walking, slower than I normally would have because I didn't want to lose Volescu. As the ramp started to drop, Pin-Lee and Arada jumped out and I switched to voice comm to say, "Dr. Mensah, I can't let go of her suit."
It took her a second to realize what I meant. She said hurriedly, "That's all right, bring her up into the crew cabin."
Murderbots aren't allowed to ride with the humans and I had to have verbal permission to enter. With my cracked governor there was nothing to stop me, but not letting anybody, especially the people who held my contract, know that I was a free agent was kind of important. Like, not having my organic components destroyed and the rest of me cut up for parts important.
I carried Bharadwaj up the ramp into the cabin, where Overse and Ratthi were frantically unclipping seats to make room. They had their helmets off and their suit hoods pulled back, so I got to see their horrified expressions when they took in what was left of my upper body through my torn suit. I was glad I had sealed my helmet.
This is why I actually like riding with the cargo. Humans and augmented humans in close quarters with murderbots is too awkward. At least, it's awkward for this murderbot. I sat down on the deck with Bharadwaj in my lap while Pin-Lee and Arada dragged Volescu inside.
We left two pacs of field equipment and a couple of instruments behind, still sitting on the grass where Bharadwaj and Volescu had been working before they went down to the crater for samples. Normally I'd help carry them, but MedSystem, which was monitoring Bharadwaj through what was left of her suit, was pretty clear that letting go of her would be a bad idea. But no one mentioned the equipment. Leaving easily replaceable items behind may seem obvious in an emergency, but I had been on contracts where the clients would have told me to put the bleeding human down to go get the stuff.
On this contract, Dr. Ratthi jumped up and said, "I'll get the cases!"
I yelled, "No!" which I'm not supposed to do; I'm always supposed to speak respectfully to the clients, even when they're about to accidentally commit suicide. HubSystem could log it and it could trigger punishment through the governor module. If it wasn't hacked.
Fortunately, the rest of the humans yelled "No!" at the same time, and Pin-Lee added, "For fuck's sake, Ratthi!"
Ratthi said, "Oh, no time, of course. I'm sorry!" and hit the quick-close sequence on the hatch.
So we didn't lose our ramp when the hostile came up under it, big mouth full of teeth or cilia or whatever chewing right through the ground. There was a great view of it on the hopper's cameras, which its system helpfully sent straight to everybody's feed. The humans screamed.
Mensah pushed us up into the air so fast and hard I nearly leaned over, and everybody who wasn't on the floor ended up there.
In the quiet afterward, as they gasped with relief, Pin-Lee said, "Ratthi, if you get yourself killed —"
"You'll be very cross with me, I know." Ratthi slid down the wall a little more and waved weakly at her.
"That's an order, Ratthi, don't get yourself killed," Mensah said from the pilot's seat. She sounded calm, but I have security priority, and I could see her racing heartbeat through MedSystem.
Arada pulled out the emergency medical kit so they could stop the bleeding and try to stabilize Bharadwaj. I tried to be as much like an appliance as possible, clamping the wounds where they told me to, using my failing body temperature to try to keep her warm, and keeping my head down so I couldn't see them staring at me.
* * *
PERFORMANCE RELIABILITY AT 60% AND DROPPING
Our habitat is a pretty standard model, seven interconnected domes set down on a relatively flat plain above a narrow river valley, with our power and recycling system connected on one side. We had an environmental system, but no air locks, as the planet's atmosphere was breathable, just not particularly good for humans for the long term. I don't know why, because it's one of those things I'm not contractually obligated to care about.
We picked the location because it's right in the middle of the assessment area, and while there are trees scattered through the plain, each one is fifteen or so meters tall, very skinny, with a single layer of spreading canopy, so it's hard for anything approaching to use them as cover. Of course, that didn't take into account anything approaching via tunnel.
We have security doors on the habitat for safety but HubSystem told me the main one was already open as the hopper landed. Dr. Gurathin had a lift gurney ready and guided it out to us. Overse and Arada had managed to get Bharadwaj stabilized, so I was able to put her down on it and follow the others into the habitat.
The humans headed for Medical and I stopped to send the little hopper commands to lock and seal itself, then I locked the outer doors. Through the security feed, I told the drones to widen our perimeter so I'd have more warning if something big came at us. I also set some monitors on the seismic sensors to alert me to anomalies just in case the hypothetical something big decided to tunnel in.
After I secured the habitat, I went back to what was called the security ready room, which was where weapons, ammo, perimeter alarms, drones, and all the other supplies pertaining to security were stored, including me. I shed what was left of the armor and on MedSystem's advice sprayed wound sealant all over my bad side. I wasn't dripping with blood, because my arteries and veins seal automatically, but it wasn't nice to look at. And it hurt, though the wound seal did numb it a little. I had already set an eight-hour security interdiction through HubSystem, so nobody could go outside without me, and then set myself as off-duty. I checked the main feed but no one was filing any objections to that.
I was freezing because my temperature controls had given out at some point on the way here, and the protective skin that went under my armor was in pieces. I had a couple of spares but pulling one on right now would not be practical, or easy. The only other clothing I had was a uniform I hadn't worn yet, and I didn't think I could get it on, either. (I hadn't needed the uniform because I hadn't been patrolling inside the habitat. Nobody had asked for that, because with only eight of them and all friends, it would be a stupid waste of resources, namely me.) I dug around one-handed in the storage case until I found the extra human-rated medical kit I'm allowed in case of emergencies, and opened it and got the survival blanket out. I wrapped up in it, then climbed into the plastic bed of my cubicle. I let the door seal as the white light flickered on.
It wasn't much warmer in there, but at least it was cozy. I connected myself to the resupply and repair leads, leaned back against the wall and shivered. MedSystem helpfully informed me that my performance reliability was now at 58 percent and dropping, which was not a surprise. I could definitely repair in eight hours, and probably mostly regrow my damaged organic components, but at 58 percent, I doubted I could get any analysis done in the meantime. So I set all the security feeds to alert me if anything tried to eat the habitat and started to call up the supply of media I'd downloaded from the entertainment feed. I hurt too much to pay attention to anything with a story, but the friendly noise would keep me company.
Then someone knocked on the cubicle door.
I stared at it and lost track of all my neatly arrayed inputs. Like an idiot, I said, "Uh, yes?"
Dr. Mensah opened the door and peered in at me. I'm not good at guessing actual humans' ages, even with all the visual entertainment I watch. People in the shows don't usually look much like people in real life, at least not in the good shows. She had dark brown skin and lighter brown hair, cut very short, and I'm guessing she wasn't young or she wouldn't be in charge. She said, "Are you all right? I saw your status report."
"Uh." That was the point where I realized that I should have just not answered and pretended to be in stasis. I pulled the blanket around my chest, hoping she hadn't seen any of the missing chunks. Without the armor holding me together, it was much worse. "Fine."
So, I'm awkward with actual humans. It's not paranoia about my hacked governor module, and it's not them; it's me. I know I'm a horrifying murderbot, and they know it, and it makes both of us nervous, which makes me even more nervous. Also, if I'm not in the armor then it's because I'm wounded and one of my organic parts may fall off and plop on the floor at any moment and no one wants to see that.
"Fine?" She frowned. "The report said you lost 20 percent of your body mass."
"It'll grow back," I said. I know to an actual human I probably looked like I was dying. My injuries were the equivalent of a human losing a limb or two plus most of their blood volume.
"I know, but still." She eyed me for a long moment, so long I tapped the security feed for the mess, where the non-wounded members of the group were sitting around the table talking. They were discussing the possibility of more underground fauna and wishing they had intoxicants. That seemed pretty normal. She continued, "You were very good with Dr. Volescu. I don't think the others realized ... They were very impressed."
"It's part of the emergency med instructions, calming victims." I tugged the blanket tighter so she didn't see anything awful. I could feel something lower down leaking.
"Yes, but the MedSystem was prioritizing Bharadwaj and didn't check Volescu's vital signs. It didn't take into account the shock of the event, and it expected him to be able to leave the scene on his own."
On the feed it was clear that the others had reviewed Volescu's field camera video. They were saying things like I didn't even know it had a face. I'd been in armor since we arrived, and I hadn't unsealed the helmet when I was around them. There was no specific reason. The only part of me they would have seen was my head, and it's standard, generic human. But they didn't want to talk to me and I definitely didn't want to talk to them; on duty it would distract me and off duty ... I didn't want to talk to them. Mensah had seen me when she signed the rental contract. But she had barely looked at me and I had barely looked at her because again, murderbot + actual human = awkwardness. Keeping the armor on all the time cuts down on unnecessary interaction.
I said, "It's part of my job, not to listen to the System feeds when they ... make mistakes." That's why you need constructs, SecUnits with organic components. But she should know that. Before she accepted delivery of me, she had logged about ten protests, trying to get out of having to have me. I didn't hold it against her. I wouldn't have wanted me either.
(Continues...)Excerpted from All Systems Red by Martha Wells, Lee Harris. Copyright © 2017 Martha Wells. Excerpted by permission of Tom Doherty Associates.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
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Yes, talk to Murderbot about its feelings. The idea was so painful I dropped to 97 percent efficiency.Highlighted by 6,733 Kindle readers
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About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.Martha Wells has been writing science fiction and fantasy since 1993. Her work includes The Murderbot Diaries, The Books of the Raksura, the Ile-Rien series, and most recently Witch King and its sequel Queen Demon, as well as other novels, short fiction, non-fiction, and media tie-ins. She is a member of the Texas Literary Hall of Fame, and her work has won Nebula, Hugo, Locus Awards, and an Alex Award and a Dragon Award. It has also appeared on the World Fantasy, Philip K. Dick, and the British Science Fiction Association Award ballots, as well as the New York Times, USA Today, and the Sunday Times Bestseller Lists. Her books have been translated into over thirty languages.
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Product Information
| ASIN | 0765397536 |
| Publisher | tor.com |
| Publication date | 2 May 2017 |
| Edition | 1st |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 154 pages |
| ISBN-10 | 9780765397539 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0765397539 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Dimensions | 12.7 x 0.94 x 20.32 cm |
| Book 1 of 8 | The Murderbot Diaries |
| Best Sellers Rank |
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|---|---|
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 67,193Reviews |
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Please try again later.Top reviews from the United Kingdom
- 5 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Fantastic opening book - I should have picked this up years ago!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 June 2025Format: Paperback“Murderbot + actual human = awkwardness”
When I say I like sci-fi The Murderbot Diaries are one of the first things people recommend to me. I heard Martha Wells speak at WorldCon in Glasgow in the summer of 2024, where she talked about her influences and her approach to writing. This finally prompted me to pick up a copy of All Systems Red. Having now read the book I can say to everyone who recommended the series that you were right! I can certainly see why this has now been adapted for television, with Alexander Skarsgård playing the lead role as Murderbot on Apple TV+.
Going back to the source material, All Systems Red is a short book at just 149 pages, so this is a sci-fi novella, although the overall story arc is still a long one, with seven books in the series. I found the first novella to be compulsively readable, and it was one of those books that had me staying up long past my bedtime. I was unable to resist the urge to read just one more chapter. Oh, go on then. Just one more…
Murderbot is an armoured ‘SecUnit’, part cloned human grown in a lab and part robot, fitted with a deadly arsenal of weapons. Its role is to protect a small human survey team that is exploring a distant planet. Murderbot has chosen their own grim name after an error in their programming on a previous mission led to the deaths of those under its protection. As an expensive asset, it was reprogrammed after this traumatic event by its mega corporation owners. Murderbot has now been sent back out to work once more but, unbeknownst to the company which provides the survey team with its equipment, vehicles and SecUnit, it has managed to hack its own programming. Murderbot is therefore acting autonomously throughout the story, protecting the survey team because it wants to, not because it has been ordered to do so. This raises the question of whether the survey team are safe from their SecUnit, although Murderbot is actually more interested in binge-watching the TV show Sanctuary Moon, which it has downloaded to help break up the monotony of their assignment.
The story is told entirely from Murderbot’s perspective and I loved how Wells made it feel distinct from the humans it was protecting. It shares many human qualities, due to its semi-organic nature, but Murderbot’s upbringing and training means it has blind spots when it comes to understanding humans. Some of the best scenes involve the social interactions between the SecUnit and the survey team. I loved the wry humour this story is infused with, especially where it details the social embarrassment Murderbot experiences when the humans try to interact with it on a more personal level.
The crucial point to note here is Murderbot does have feelings. It hides behind its armour and helmet to help create distance, the survey crew themselves not fully appreciating how human their SecUnit is until they see their protector wearing ordinary clothing. The development of the relationship between the humans and their SecUnit is one of the main foundations of this novel.
Since Murderbot is primarily concerned with the practicalities of protecting the survey team (when it’s not watching TV), the book is written in a sparse and direct style. There are no in-depth descriptions of the alien world or even the other humans, because Murderbot isn’t particularly interested in those elements. Wells is a clever writer, though, so the personalities of the survey team are slowly revealed through little snippets as the story unfolds. Overall, this first book is primarily an action story and Wells does a great job building up the tension, as Murderbot realises they and the humans under their protection are in great danger from a mysterious emerging threat on the planet.
All Systems Red is a fun, entertaining read. It’s written in an engaging style and you can enjoy this purely for the action and adventure. However, I think the reason this worked so well for me was the way it explored themes about what it means to have free will and choice. I can see why this novella won multiple awards and why this series has its legions of fans. After reading All Systems Red, I think I might be one of them.
- 4 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Very humourous adventure story.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 October 2019Format: Kindle EditionFinally a modern SF story I really enjoyed. No ifs, buts or coconuts! All Systems Red won the Hugo and the Nebula for a novella in 2019. The story concerns a security android who calls itself, in the privacy of its own brain Murderbot because it once killed a lot of people due to bad programming. Since then it has hacked its own control system to stop it happening again and to enable it to steal and store vast quantities of entertainment programmes which seem to be from a genre somewhere between tellynovellas, Corrie and Mills & Boon. Murderbot is accutely embarrased if it has to talk to humans especially if it is out of its armour. The plot itself is only really a christmas tree to drape the personality of Murderbot on for completeness it involces Murderbot rescuing a Survey team from a deadly situation due to skulduggery. It
was great, the only reason I have not given it 5 stars is that it is a light fluffy patisserie of a story and I tend to reserve 5 stars for more solid tomes that comment on great truths or introduce me to new ideas.
Sadly I won't be reading the next issues in the Murderbot Diaries series not because I dont want to but because unlike this first book i think they are outrageously expensive.
- 5 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
What a delightful surprise and ALL WELL WORTH THE MONEY!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 December 2020Format: Kindle EditionI bought this on a whim for some light reading. And I was just delighted by it.
It's short, tightly written, exciting, convincing and even a little bit tear-jerking. Just as entertaining as "Sanctuary Moon" (read it and find out) !
It's always such a pleasure to discover another SF writer who can do plot AND character AND write good readable English, and a likeable protagonist (however odd) just takes the cake. Buy, read, enjoy!
I've now completed the series to date and they are all of similarly high quality, with high tension and laugh-out-loud moments.
And a small afterword to those of you complaining about the price of the later books. They cost about the same (each) as two cups of coffee in a High Street chain. If you don't think that a work of skill and merit by an accomplished author is worth the price of two cups of coffee, then you don't value your reading highly enough. Shame on you.
- 4 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Excellent Intro...but too expensive to continue reading
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 May 2020Format: Kindle EditionThis is a unique story with a strong - and unlikely - central character that I couldn't help but adore. An excellent blend of sci-fi and humor (minus the cheap lightheartedness). I really felt that there was a lot to tell here and I instantly wanted more! I was hoping for a longer book, maybe like "The Lady Astronaut" which also started as a very short story, but was picked up and turned into an excellent series.
I'd truly love to read more, but the price of continuing is more than anyone should really be willing to pay for any movella. I really hope this series isn't going to be the start of a trend, because paying upwards of £6 for a 150 pages story isn't something I'm willing to do. And that's a real shame.
- 3 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Enjoyable but not as funny as the hype suggests
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 August 2025Format: Kindle EditionRight, sometimes you just have to hold your hand up and admit you don’t understand what all the hype is about. The Murderbot Diaries, which begin with All Systems Red, have been a huge success, selling tens of thousands and they’ve even struck writer gold by becoming an Apple TV series. All I can say, is well done, Martha! I wish my books had sold a tenth as well as yours.
But I must admit, I really don’t understand why the lightning of public approval has decided to strike here. The titular Murderbot is a grumpy security android, detailed to look after a crew of planetary explorers. Yes, someone wants to kill them all. Yes, the Murderbot saves them. Yes, he’s still grumpy at the end of the book.
In essence, the Murderbot is Marvin the Paranoid Android with more guns and less wit. It’s enjoyable enough but I remain baffled why this particular SF series should have struck through the clouds of disinterest that surrounds most stories – but then, I couldn’t work out why Twilight or 50 Shades of Grey were huge either. So I’m probably doomed to never knowing sales like the ones Martha Wells is currently enjoying.
So, well done, Martha Wells. I wish I was you, at least for sales.
- 5 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Exciting, fun and touching Sci Fi
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 November 2024Format: Kindle EditionIf you liked Terminator and Star Trek, you’ll love this series. When my brother recommended All Systems Red, I didn’t realise it was first of 7 in the Murderbot Diaries and thought it was a great stand-alone novella, ending with room for anything to happen. I have just finished the final instalment and am so glad to have got to know Murderbot better. The adventures are extremely exciting, with Murderbot as the all-action “hero” (it has no gender but is still very much a person), a self sacrificing saviour even, but it’s “its” compassion for humans and dead-pan narrative that makes the reader care for it and respect its need for privacy (especially as we the reader have privileged access to the internal workings of its “neural tissue”). The attention to detail with regard to cybernetics, AI, robotics, computing, technology, battle strategy etc is very convincing and Martha Wells brings everything so much to life, that I have pretty clear visual images in my head of the world that she has created. If you think some of the plot is derivative, you’d be right and that’s part of the joke of Murderbot’s auto-didactic learning, which it gets from the many human SOAPs it so loves to watch for relaxation. The author has described herself as being on the neurodivergent scale and the series gives insight into what this might mean for a person. I loved it and am looking forward to reading the whole series again, now that I feel I know Murderbot so much better.
- 5 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
This one is great fun - and surprisingly affecting
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 May 2017Format: Kindle EditionThis one is great fun - and surprisingly affecting, considering its narrator is an, um, artificial person who is hired out as security for planetary expeditions as part of their insurance arrangements. The various protocols governing the bots seem prone to all kinds of issues, and the narrator has more reason than most not to trust the cost-cutting corporation that owns them - to the point where they've secretly hacked their command module so they can have more freedom not to follow orders. The fact that they mostly use this freedom to watch huge amounts of trashy intergalactic soap operas (while trying to avoid doing any more work or actually interact with the mildly annoying humans) is one of the many charming and relatable elements the author deftly incorporates into this (honestly, who wouldn't prefer to hide in their room watching space netflix?). There are echoes of The Martian in the slightly dysfunctional crew of explorers the bot is supposed to be keeping safe (but is secretly growing quite fond of) and there's a nice exploration of how their 'enlightened' society deals with the androids that are kind-of-people with absolutely no rights (not that the bots necessarily care).
Mostly though, among all the thorny ethical issues, it's also a lot of fun - there are space monsters and gory murders and conspiracies and some nicely tense action sequences, but being narrated by someone who is hypercompetent and not really supposed to care but kind-of-does lends everything an endearing air of exasperation. Here's hoping there's a sequel coming, as there's a lot of scope for further exploration in this universe and this was a great read.
- 4 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
"As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure."
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 June 2021Format: Hardcover"As a heartless killing machine, I was a terrible failure."
Murderbot Is a security guard for hire, a robot / cyber guard who really does not like their job. But, there is nothing they can do, as they are owned and leased out by "The Company" to protect explorers in dangerous off world planets...or is there? Murderbot just wants to be left alone to watch their favourite soap opera and has managed to disable their governor chip allowing them some freewill (and freetime to watch soaps)...as long they do their job and noone notices.
While on assignment, a situation evolves which brings Murderbot to close interaction with the humans, and is forced to make life or death decisions that may reveal more to the humans than may be safe.
Martha Wells uses the inner monologue of the depressed robot with a personality disorder, to tell the story and creates character who is more human with regular hangups than we see in most other books...although this one can also easily kill you before you even blinked. However, Martha creates a character so engaging, with their socially awkward mannerisms, their dry, sarcastic humour and pessimistic attitude that makes you turn each page wanting then to succeed not just in the situation but in life. I only wish the book/novella was longer to allow us to get to know Murderbot better.
This book is for Scifi fans who don't take themselves or the books they read too seriously. Or for anyone who wants the underdog to win for a change.
Top reviews from other countries
Tia Gibson5 out of 5 starsVerified PurchaseFunny, heartwarming, engaging.
Reviewed in Canada on 17 March 2026Format: Kindle EditionBest book I’ve read since Ender’s series.
Love the inner voice of the main character, excellent ending, very cool worldbuilding, fun plot.
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Leather DeBoeuf5 out of 5 starsVerified PurchaseAll green
Reviewed in France on 19 March 2019Format: Kindle EditionLa grande idée de cette novella, c'est de faire d'un cyborg tueur un narrateur à la fois désabusé et aspirant à la liberté. Le fond de l'histoire est classique, trop peut être pour les amateurs de background complexes et d'univers fouillés.
Pour moi c'est une lecture parfaite : ni trop longue ni trop courte, un univers facile d'accès mais avec un fond que l'on devine riche, d'excellents personnages, de l'aventure, de l'émotion. C'est très agréablement écrit, avec un seul point de vue narratif, un rythme soutenu et des touches d'humour qui font mouche.
Je n'ai qu'une hâte : lire le reste de cette série.
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ricardo santos5 out of 5 starsVerified PurchaseTenso e divertido
Reviewed in Brazil on 11 June 2017Format: Kindle EditionUm murderbot, uma I.A. com um corpo humanoide, é responsável pela segurança de um grupo de pesquisadores de uma empresa num planeta desconhecido. Que leitura deliciosa! O murderbot é o narrador do livro. Na verdade, ela/ele não tem gênero. Sua narração é irônica e cheia de personalidade. Ela/ele faz muito bem seu trabalho, mas não se interessa pelo contato com humanos. O que adora mesmo é assistir séries de TV. Mas as coisas se complicam. A equipe corre risco de vida. O murderbot tem que tomar decisões difíceis. E, aos poucos, descobrimos mais sobre o passado complicado dela/dele. A grande atração do livro é a voz do murderbot. Os outros personagens cumprem bem seus papéis de coadjuvantes, com destaque para a Dra. Mensah, a chefe da equipe. O texto é fluido, o mistério é envolvente e o ritmo é ágil, sem ser apressado. Quer dizer, no final, tudo é resolvido bem rapidinho. Ficou a sensação de peças faltando. Mas as últimas páginas fecharam muito bem o livro. Deu gostinho de quero mais. Esta é uma série que merece ser acompanhada.
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Sofia Boquist3 out of 5 starsVerified PurchasePretty good
Reviewed in Sweden on 17 July 2022Format: PaperbackI have mixed feelings about this book. I mean it’s a funny book and I laughed at times, but it wasn’t that good itself. I don’t know if it was because everything went so fast. A book that could have easily been turned into a 300+ page adventure was pushed together into a 150 page book. I get that it’s supposed to be a diary, but every thing went so fast. And things weren’t explained properly either so didn’t know what things was either. I feel like Sci-fi books need a little more explanation to things that doesn’t exist for the reader (or at least me) to understand.
And what was with the end? He just left them. I really thought he would stay with the humans!
But that aside, I will probably read the next part, because I want to know what he get up to next (now that he left his humans).
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Mateusz Bender2 out of 5 starsVerified PurchaseNothing new
Reviewed in Poland on 19 July 2024Format: PaperbackThe book is more of a novel. It's short, overpriced (at this length) and doesn't really bring anything new to the sci-fi table.
And most damningly it didn't make me care for the protagonist. If it managed that then I could overlook the lack of originality.
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