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All Systems Red: The Murderbot Diaries (The Murderbot Diaries, 1)

All Systems Red: The Murderbot Diaries (The Murderbot Diaries, 1)

byMartha Wells
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Top positive review

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Rhys
5.0 out of 5 starsFall In Love With Murderbot
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 1, 2021
This book series got me through the latter half of 2020 (specifically the period of the American election and its fallout) which is no mean feat. I read them repeatedly, over and over again, so many times that I genuinely could not even venture a guess as to how many times I've read the whole series through anymore. I still pull them out in between the other things I'm reading. I adore Murderbot and its adventures. It may honestly be the most relatable character in fiction I've ever met. My single solitary complaint about the entire series is that there isn't more of it and I already have the next part on pre-order, which I await with baited breath.

(I've gifted copies of the first volume to five different people so far, and the only reason I haven't given it to more is because I'm just not that sociable as to be regularly exchanging gifts with all that many folks.)

For those of you unfamiliar with the Murderbot Diaries (which I assume is most if not all of the people reading this, as that's generally the point of perusing book reviews) let me curtail the aimless gushing and focus on some specifics: the first four books in the series (this one included) are short novellas, and while I'm generally a fan of longer fiction their length is absolutely perfect. They're all self-contained adventures, but they build together into a longer connected storyline -- sort of like the episodes within a television season. You can read and enjoy each one on its own merits, but you'll probably find yourself wanting to do them all in proper order so you can get the full experience of Murderbot's life. (Yes, the main character is named Murderbot. It chose the name itself, and while the first volume gives you enough information to understand why you will learn more of the story behind that name, and its emotional weight, as the series goes on.)

After the four novellas, there is an extremely brief short story that you can find online for free (titled "Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory") and while a number of people have complained about it, I honestly thought it was a great interlude. And given that it's free and will probably take you less than twenty minutes to read, I don't see why there's any reason to skip it. It's fun to get a different perspective on things, and it offers some lovely background characterization of one of the most important secondary characters in the series. It makes a nice bridge to the novel which follows, too.

The novel reads a lot like the shorter adventures, especially at the start, and in a way it just feels like it's longer because there are more events taking place so it takes more words to tell what happened, rather than that the author set out to specifically "write a novel" as opposed to a novella -- which is nice, because the tone and style and everything remain beautifully consistent throughout the whole series -- but at the same time, the fact that it DOES spend more time on one plot and one group of characters means there is a chance to get a little more in-depth with various things and people, and that's nice too. Some stories/series are more suited to one type of writing or another, but I feel like with the Murderbot Diaries there is no wrong length. Whether you're sitting down for ten minutes or ten hours, you're going to get the same delightfully enjoyable experience out of these books.

As to the writing itself, it alternates between engrossing, hilarious, heart-rending, and painfully accurate. You're going to identity with and relate to Murderbot so much that you'll find yourself (at least, if you're anything like me you will) also thinking of humans as an "other" during the course of your reading, as you mentally (or out-loud; no judgement if you're one of those people who exclaims aloud as you read; I rarely do, but this seems like an appropriate book series for that sort of behavior) shout at them to not do stupid things and just listen to their SecUnit, please!

It's very much a found-family story, albeit a slow-build one, and despite the occasional body-count (really a rather small number, given that the series is about a character named Murderbot) it's ultimately a story of good people and happy endings. Murderbot will sometimes punch you straight in the heart with an emotional moment or observation, but it's the good sort of pain that only the best stories cause. I love these books more than I can fairly describe, and I hope you'll give them a chance because I think you'll love them too.

P.S. for anyone concerned, there is surprisingly little gore for how much violence is inherent in the life of a Murderbot. A fair amount of swearing, yes, and the occasional (usually annoyed, sometimes disgusted, always disinterested) reference to the existence of sex as a human activity that exists, but there are no lengthy passages expounding in great detail upon the injuries or deaths that take place throughout the series. I suppose some people might find the no-nonsense way Murderbot presents such things disquieting, but I don't think even squeamish people are likely to be too upset.

The only trigger-warning I can think to give is to caution people that there are definitely parallels/references to abuse in Murderbot's past and the emotional kick of those might be unpleasantly familiar to abuse survivors. YMMV of course, but I expect that the way current characters deal with Murderbot and its trauma likely makes for a more positive and supportive process than a triggering one, but if that is something to which you think you may be sensitive, please do brace yourself ahead of time.
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30 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Jim Arrowood
3.0 out of 5 starsThis One Just Didn't Do It For Me.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 18, 2022
This book appeared in an ad on Facebook and the cover caught my attention. Then I read the blurb and was further intrigued, so I borrowed it from Kindle Unlimited.

All Systems Red is a sci-fi novella by Martha Wells. It is about the musings of a manufactured cybernetic organism that refers to itself as a Murderbot because of an incident it was involved in at a time before this story takes place. The being is actually a mobile security system charged with making sure a small group of scientists on a distant planet are safe.

I'll say at the outset that I am a little cold on this story. I liked the idea and was hoping it would be better than it is. Unfortunately, there didn't really seem to be a point to the story, and it left me with a lot of questions. There are five more stories in the series and would be willing to read the rest of them, but not at the price the entire series costs. Each book is about 150 pages and the sell for $10. Sorry, but I don't think I am going to pay that much to read the books not on Unlimited.

I will also add that, as far as reviews are concerned, I find myself in the minority of readers who absolutely love this book and the rest of the series. Amazon shows an average rating of 4.5 out of five with 13,411 rating/reviews and Goodreads reports a 4.16 out of five with a whopping 129,148 rating/reviews.

Perhaps I missed something or just don't get it. I don't know. But I wasn't impressed enough to invest in the rest of the series.

An androgynous cybernetic organism who is charged with protecting a small group of scientists is having problems. It has a broken control chip and has more or less gone rogue, but it cannot override its own programming to set aside its mission. So, it avoids any contact with the people it’s supposed to protect and prefers to spend its time alone watching downloaded vids of television shows. When it is called into service to perform is programmed duty, it does so very well, but when the members of the scientific team reach out to it to make it part of the team, it rejects all attempts and sulks in its compartment, feeling sorry for itself.

The Murderbot is an antisocial machine/human organism that spends a lot of time hating its job and the people it is programmed to serve. It is supposed to be androgynous, but I didn't see it that way. From the very first page of the book, the prose screams that the being is more female oriented as opposed to neutral.

I've racked my brain trying to find a favorite plot point to talk about, but I cannot find one. This is just a sad story about a sad artificial intelligent being with consciousness.

I really wanted to love this story, but I neither loved it nor hated it. It's just kind of there. As I said before, I might have missed the point and your milage may vary. If I try to come up with a theme, the entire time I read this book I thought about Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker’s Guide character, Marvin the Paranoid Android. But Adams did it better.

This book didn't inspire me to read on in the series and the cost of the rest of the books put me off even more.

All Systems Red has enjoyed a lot of acclaim along with the high ratings, winning a bunch of prestigious awards. I find myself somewhat baffled by this because while it isn't trash; I have read many far better stories.

It is well written and easy to follow, but there just isn't much there for me.
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From the United States

Rhys
5.0 out of 5 stars Fall In Love With Murderbot
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 1, 2021
Verified Purchase
This book series got me through the latter half of 2020 (specifically the period of the American election and its fallout) which is no mean feat. I read them repeatedly, over and over again, so many times that I genuinely could not even venture a guess as to how many times I've read the whole series through anymore. I still pull them out in between the other things I'm reading. I adore Murderbot and its adventures. It may honestly be the most relatable character in fiction I've ever met. My single solitary complaint about the entire series is that there isn't more of it and I already have the next part on pre-order, which I await with baited breath.

(I've gifted copies of the first volume to five different people so far, and the only reason I haven't given it to more is because I'm just not that sociable as to be regularly exchanging gifts with all that many folks.)

For those of you unfamiliar with the Murderbot Diaries (which I assume is most if not all of the people reading this, as that's generally the point of perusing book reviews) let me curtail the aimless gushing and focus on some specifics: the first four books in the series (this one included) are short novellas, and while I'm generally a fan of longer fiction their length is absolutely perfect. They're all self-contained adventures, but they build together into a longer connected storyline -- sort of like the episodes within a television season. You can read and enjoy each one on its own merits, but you'll probably find yourself wanting to do them all in proper order so you can get the full experience of Murderbot's life. (Yes, the main character is named Murderbot. It chose the name itself, and while the first volume gives you enough information to understand why you will learn more of the story behind that name, and its emotional weight, as the series goes on.)

After the four novellas, there is an extremely brief short story that you can find online for free (titled "Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory") and while a number of people have complained about it, I honestly thought it was a great interlude. And given that it's free and will probably take you less than twenty minutes to read, I don't see why there's any reason to skip it. It's fun to get a different perspective on things, and it offers some lovely background characterization of one of the most important secondary characters in the series. It makes a nice bridge to the novel which follows, too.

The novel reads a lot like the shorter adventures, especially at the start, and in a way it just feels like it's longer because there are more events taking place so it takes more words to tell what happened, rather than that the author set out to specifically "write a novel" as opposed to a novella -- which is nice, because the tone and style and everything remain beautifully consistent throughout the whole series -- but at the same time, the fact that it DOES spend more time on one plot and one group of characters means there is a chance to get a little more in-depth with various things and people, and that's nice too. Some stories/series are more suited to one type of writing or another, but I feel like with the Murderbot Diaries there is no wrong length. Whether you're sitting down for ten minutes or ten hours, you're going to get the same delightfully enjoyable experience out of these books.

As to the writing itself, it alternates between engrossing, hilarious, heart-rending, and painfully accurate. You're going to identity with and relate to Murderbot so much that you'll find yourself (at least, if you're anything like me you will) also thinking of humans as an "other" during the course of your reading, as you mentally (or out-loud; no judgement if you're one of those people who exclaims aloud as you read; I rarely do, but this seems like an appropriate book series for that sort of behavior) shout at them to not do stupid things and just listen to their SecUnit, please!

It's very much a found-family story, albeit a slow-build one, and despite the occasional body-count (really a rather small number, given that the series is about a character named Murderbot) it's ultimately a story of good people and happy endings. Murderbot will sometimes punch you straight in the heart with an emotional moment or observation, but it's the good sort of pain that only the best stories cause. I love these books more than I can fairly describe, and I hope you'll give them a chance because I think you'll love them too.

P.S. for anyone concerned, there is surprisingly little gore for how much violence is inherent in the life of a Murderbot. A fair amount of swearing, yes, and the occasional (usually annoyed, sometimes disgusted, always disinterested) reference to the existence of sex as a human activity that exists, but there are no lengthy passages expounding in great detail upon the injuries or deaths that take place throughout the series. I suppose some people might find the no-nonsense way Murderbot presents such things disquieting, but I don't think even squeamish people are likely to be too upset.

The only trigger-warning I can think to give is to caution people that there are definitely parallels/references to abuse in Murderbot's past and the emotional kick of those might be unpleasantly familiar to abuse survivors. YMMV of course, but I expect that the way current characters deal with Murderbot and its trauma likely makes for a more positive and supportive process than a triggering one, but if that is something to which you think you may be sensitive, please do brace yourself ahead of time.
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Lloyd Lofthouse
VINE VOICE
5.0 out of 5 stars The MurderBot is not a Robot or a Cyborg
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 23, 2022
Verified Purchase
I’m terrible at writing book reviews soon after I finish reading one. Here, it’s seven books, all from the same author, Martha Wells. I’m sorry, Ms. Wells, I should’ve written these seven, five-star reviews a long time ago.

Is a robot by any other name, still a robot? The answer: not the MurderBot.

The MurderBot is a unique individual. It’s not human. Technically, because some of its parts are biological, it’s not a robot. I think the MurderBot may be a reverse cyborg, since the actual definition for cyborg says it’s “a living being whose powers are enhanced by computer implants or mechanical body parts.”

After reading the first seven MurderBot books, I think they built the MurderBot the other way around: a mechanical machine with a computer for a brain enhanced with cloned human tissue. Maybe parts of its brain are also cloned. I’m not clear about that yet.

Now the MurderBot is more than a machine with an app controlling what it can do. The MurderBot thinks for itself, since it hacked its core program designed to control its behavior and what it was allowed to do. After hacking its core program probably before the first book, it is very loyal to humans that it likes, willing to be shot and blown up to protect its very vulnerable biological friends.

After all, if a machine gets blown up, it can be rebuilt, with new cloned parts, too. And as long as the MurderBot has a backup for all of its programs and memories, theoretically, it can’t die like a human.
I’ve been reading science fiction since the 1960s and I’ve never read a story with a robot like this one. How much do I like and trust this MurderBot? Well, If I decoded to rent a room in my house to earn a little extra income, I’d want to rent it to this MurderBot, never a human, since I agree with the MurderBot and don't trust most humans either.

Since I’m writing this review for the first seven books in the MurderBot series, I’m going to use it for all seven. By the way, I bought all seven of these books from Amazon.
9 people found this helpful
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LA in Dallas
4.0 out of 5 stars Murderbot is a grumpy introvert
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 20, 2022
Verified Purchase
** spoiler alert **

I'm sorry, but I cannot do it. I can't refer to Murderbot as "it". I know that's the pronoun she and her colleagues use throughout the book, but as a native English speaker d'un certain âge, I can't help but see "it" as the impersonal pronoun, the pronoun used for things that are things, not persons. And THE WHOLE ENTIRE POINT of All Systems Red is that Murderbot is a person. I could tolerate "they", since, although it is grammatically impersonal, there is long English language tradition of using "they" for a person. But not "it". So, hoping that I don't offend anyone by misungendering our protagonist, I will call her "her" in this review.

All Systems Red has two linked plots. Both revolve around mysteries. The obvious one, which I will call Plot One, is hinted at by the last sentence of the publisher's blurb:

"But when a neighboring mission goes dark, it's up to the scientists and their Murderbot to get to the truth."

That's an action plot, and it's a good one. I'll say little about it in this review, since I think the less obvious mystery is the heart of the novella, and the most interesting. The mystery at the heart of Plot Two is this question, "What kind of being is Murderbot?" Murderbot refers to herself repeatedly as a "construct", but it is never spelled out what that means. She makes it clear that she has both organic and inorganic components, and that both are essential to her function. She is a security robot, a SecBot, and is chattel of "The Company", which has rented her out to a company of explorers. In the view of The Company, and (initially) the explorers, she is a machine.

Murderbot is engaged in a secret revolt against The Company -- as the publisher tells us, she "has hacked its own governor module", making her capable of disobeying commands she is supposedly compelled to follow. And in the course of Plot One she repeatedly displays motivation and independence, which make it completely clear that she is, in fact, a person. I will quote one example here (with minimal context, to avoid spoiling). Murderbot is suspected of binge-watching a TV serial called "Sanctuary Moon". One of the explorers, Ratthi, tests that suspicion.

'Ratthi said, “The one where the colony’s solicitor killed the terraforming supervisor who was the secondary donor for her implanted baby?”
'Again, I couldn’t help it. I said, “She didn’t kill him, that’s a *filthy* lie.”'

The word "filthy" (which, in the original is a different word beginning with "f" -- I substituted it so I can post this review on Amazon) is revealing -- it shows that Murderbot, although entirely aware that "Sanctuary Moon" is fiction, is emotionally involved with the characters. You understand this, because you're human, and it is a very human feeling. (This, I thought, was impressive story-telling on Martha Wells' part -- one word conveys so much!)

I believe that the not-so-secret purpose of All Systems Red is to introduce us to Murderbot as a person. Plot One is there to help with that by giving her opportunities to show her personality through her actions. But Plot Two is the heart and purpose of All Systems Red.
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M. Krous
5.0 out of 5 stars First book in one of my favorite series
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 29, 2022
Verified Purchase
Murderbot, a depressed, asexual cyborg with crippling social anxiety and the protective instincts of a mother bear, tries to keep its clients alive against a deadly corporate conspiracy.

It's a quick read, but an excellent novella all around. I like the contrast of personalities you get between characters who come from a corporate hellscape, the others from a sort-of socialist utopia, and Murderbot trapped in the middle. Its mix of cynicism, anxiety, and desire to protect others make it one of the most interesting characters in a long while. It also manages to be rather clever, born out of years of maintaining its secrets and trying to stay alive.

I think the series gets better as it goes along, but this first book is still a great introduction to the world and its characters.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars I like this
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 31, 2023
Verified Purchase
Murderbot is a very interesting character. I'm looking foward to reading more of the series to see how they evolve and if they ever accept themselves as part of a team.
This story has a good balance of character development and action and the story moved nicely.
Got to go now & read the next one.
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Brian Carr
5.0 out of 5 stars A truly unique protagonist
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 31, 2022
Verified Purchase
Murderbot is a cyborg but born as a full adult straight into slavery and violence with all the trauma that this would entail.
The governor unit built-in as part of its Hardware is such a sanitary term for a device designed to incite pain directly into the organic parts of its brain.
Martha Wells does an extraordinary job of exploring how one would exist, survive, achieve freedom, and then what so many of us who value freedom forget to consider. What one who has never known freedom would do when they achieve it.
That it is a superhuman construct that all media depicts as killing machines if their governor is disabled just add so much spice to an already complex and relatable character.
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Scott E Branchfield
4.0 out of 5 stars Funny and weird
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 18, 2021
Verified Purchase
This year Martha Wells won the Nebula Award for best science fiction novel. Her winning novel was Network Effect. I have never read anything by Martha Wells. I discovered that Network Effect is the fifth book in The Murderbot Diaries series. I decided I had better start at the beginning with the first book: All Systems Red. It turns out All Systems Red won the Hugo, the Nebula Award, and other awards in 2018 for best novella.
The main character calls itself ‘Murderbot’. It is a SecUnit: a security unit, owned by “the company” and contracted out to provide security for survey teams or anyone else who needed security. The Murderbot is some kind of a cyborg, part human and part machine, but it is more machine than human. It has artificial intelligence and human brain tissue. It does not have status a as person, hence it can be owned. All SecUnits come with governor modules that govern what they can and cannot do. Well, they are supposed to have governor modules. This particular SecUnit had a troubled history. Due to a malfunctioning governor module, it had gone on some kind of rampage and killed a lot of people. It was because of this incident that it decided to call itself Murderbot. It did not want that to happen again, so it took matters into its own hands, and hacked its own governor module. Now, it pretends to be a normal SecUnit and does its job the way it is supposed to, but we hear the snarky inner thought that its clients never hear.
The story is narrated by the Murderbot, so we do hear those irreverent comments that no SecUnit is supposed to think. This particular SecUnit is really more interested in watching entertainment feeds than doing much of anything else. What really sold me on this book is the humor. It is not a comedy, but there are moments reading Murderbot’s commentary that made me laugh out loud.
I am referring to it as “it” because it has no gender. There are no genitalia or sex hormones, and no sexual desires. As I said, it is mostly machine. Yet we feel there is a human inside there somewhere, otherwise why would it be so addicted to human entertainment serials. And it must have something akin to a guilty conscience after the malfunction killed all those people, so it took action to prevent that in the future. And it seems like the fact that it calls itself Muderbot, is an act of penance. There is perhaps a bit of self-loathing that is numbed by the entertainment feeds. The humans don’t know it calls itself Murderbot. They just refer to it as “SecUnit”. They have no idea what is going on under the surface.
It dislikes being too close to humans, but it does its job well. It protects its human clients above and beyond the call of duty. It claims to do these things to cover up the fact that it has a hacked governor module. But we suspect there is a little more to it than that. Some of the clients, which it calls “my humans,” must feel it too. There are some that almost want to take up something like a “free the android” cause, but they are reminded not to say such things as it makes the SecUnit uncomfortable. Such talk does make the Murderbot uncomfortable. It wants to keep a low profile, and it really does get uncomfortable when humans get too close. The only humans it really likes interacting with (if you can call it that) are the ones it enjoys watching on the entertainment feeds.
Martha Wells had to know when she was writing this that it was going to be part of a series. Sometimes when you read the first book of a series, you are left with a very unsatisfying ending that doesn’t resolve much. This book comes to a logical conclusion, but still allows us to see that there is more in store for Murderbot.
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doyle hill
5.0 out of 5 stars entertaining and original
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 5, 2023
Verified Purchase
This sort of started without background but quickly that was explained and I found it original and very entertaining to read. I already plan on reading more of the series
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Jonas Wouters
5.0 out of 5 stars short and great
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 4, 2023
Verified Purchase
I could’ve read this in 1 sitting if I had the time. No unnecessary filler to get through. Not too much focus on combat. A great read!
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and Written Descriptively!
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 16, 2023
Verified Purchase
It’s a very quick read that kept me enticed the whole time simply because the main protagonist ‘Murderbot’ had such interesting thoughts and dialogue. The author also does a great job of explaining a lot of how the technology works which is huge for the credibility of this book. 10/10 would recommend!
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