Book 4 of the Murderbot Diaries
Pros: lots of action, clever hacking and planning, character development
Cons:
After its mission on Milu, Murderbot learns that Dr. Mensah has been kidnapped by the GrayCris corporation and heads to TranRollinHyfa to rescue her.
It’s nice seeing some of the characters from All Systems Red again, and how they react to Murderbot’s evolution. There’s a lot of clever hacking and some great chase and fight sequences. Seeing Murderbot back with its favourite human was awesome. I had *feelings* when Murderbot let Mensah hug it. We also learn why it likes The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon so much. As the books progress there’s more subtext regarding trauma and how different entities are impacted by it. An event at the end of the book shows Murderbot some of the benefits of its human side, which is neat. As always, Murderbot's narrative is full of an enjoyable dry humour.
This is one of my favourite novellas in the series.
=> There’s a short story called “Home: Habitat, Range, Niche, Territory” that fits in before the next book. It deals with Mensah on Preservation Station and how she’s coping in the aftermath of her kidnapping.
While Network Effect was published as book 5, Fugutive Telemetry chronologically comes next.
Friday, 28 November 2025
Wednesday, 26 November 2025
Book Review: Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells
This is the 3rd book in the Murderbot Diaries series.
Pros: complex fight scenes, character development
Cons:
This novella picks up where Artificial Condition leaves off, with Murderbot on a transport arriving at RaviHyral station. It sees an interview with Mensah talking about a terraforming platform recently abandoned by GrayCris, and decides to check it out to see if they’ve left any incriminating evidence behind. Sneaking aboard means befriending a bot and protecting a new group of humans.
Murderbot needs to lie its way through a bunch of human and bot encounters, trying to keep its story straight. There’s corporate intrigue and some great fight scenes. Since it doesn’t have access to a repair cubicle or medsystem anymore, Murderbot needs to be more careful about taking damage. So it’s getting clever about how it approaches conflict. It’s really cool seeing it learn and develop as the series goes on.
Murderbot’s dry sense of humour shines through. The fight scenes are great and again, while the novella is short, it’s impactful.
=> The next book in the series is Exit Strategy.
Pros: complex fight scenes, character development
Cons:
This novella picks up where Artificial Condition leaves off, with Murderbot on a transport arriving at RaviHyral station. It sees an interview with Mensah talking about a terraforming platform recently abandoned by GrayCris, and decides to check it out to see if they’ve left any incriminating evidence behind. Sneaking aboard means befriending a bot and protecting a new group of humans.
Murderbot needs to lie its way through a bunch of human and bot encounters, trying to keep its story straight. There’s corporate intrigue and some great fight scenes. Since it doesn’t have access to a repair cubicle or medsystem anymore, Murderbot needs to be more careful about taking damage. So it’s getting clever about how it approaches conflict. It’s really cool seeing it learn and develop as the series goes on.
Murderbot’s dry sense of humour shines through. The fight scenes are great and again, while the novella is short, it’s impactful.
=> The next book in the series is Exit Strategy.
Monday, 24 November 2025
Book Review: Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
Book 2 of the Murderbot Diaries
Cons:
Beginning directly after the events in All Systems Red, Murderbot hitches a ride on the intelligent transport ART to the mining installation where its mass murder event took place. It needs to reconcile its past before it can decide its future. But visiting the installation means pretending to be an augmented human security consultant. Luckily ART has some ideas to help it with that.
Murderbot and ART are both sarcastic and start off rubbing each other the wrong way, making their interactions very entertaining to read. You get a great feel for the concerns Murderbot has about getting caught while trying to investigate its past. It doesn’t know how to act like a human, so it’s fun watching it help the young humans who don’t know what they’re doing either. More of the wider world is hinted at, with other corporations that put profits over people.
It’s a novella, so it’s on the short side, but the story packs a punch.
=> If you’re reading the short stories as well as the novellas, here is where you read “Rapport: Friendship, Solidarity, Communion, Empathy”. This story centres on ART/Perihelion’s crew and a mission they’re on as they wonder why their intelligent transport seems different after it’s last unmanned cargo run.
Otherwise, the next book in the series is Rogue Protocol
Saturday, 22 November 2025
Revisited review: All Systems Red by Martha Wells
I first read a year after it was published and loved it but thought it was on the short side. I like books with a lot of detailed world building and character development. Though I’d collected the other books in the series as they came out, I never seemed to have time to read them. I recently reread All Systems Red and continued with the rest of the Murderbot Diaries series (novellas, novels, and short stories), then read them all a second time and have a better appreciation for this book. Sometimes you find a book at the right time and it just speaks to you. And Murderbot’s journey has had a massive impact on me this time through. As the series continues you learn so much about the world and the other characters. As someone who never seems to know what to do or say in social situations, Murderbot’s anxiety is highly relatable. I also appreciate how, as the series progresses, the author deals with trauma and its aftermath. Murderbot's narrative has a dry sense of humour and sarcasm, which I absolutely love. As I've reread the books I've also discovered a real depth to the material. Each time through I learned new things, and could better appreciate Murderbot's journey. I'm also impressed how each book tells a different kind of story. One is about uncovering the past, one is a murder mystery, one is a rescue mission. This keeps the series feeling fresh, as it's not just similar plots with minor variations each time. I can't wait to see where Murderbot goes in the future.
Pros: interesting protagonist
Cons: short
Murderbot is a SecUnit made of cloned human and mechanical parts that’s hacked its governor module so it no longer has to obey commands. It’s been assigned to provide security for a small survey group looking at a new planet. But the group encounters an unknown hostile life form that wasn’t mentioned in the original survey report, which makes them wonder what else was missed - or possibly removed on purpose.
This is a 100 page novella, so it’s fairly short. That means it’s light on the world-building and character development. While you get to know Murderbot pretty well, the other characters, with the exception of Gurathin (who’s a light antagonist) and Mensah (the group leader) felt interchangeable. Having said that, Murderbot is fascinating and you really get inside its head.
The plot was interesting and quick paced. There are some tense moments, though the ending comes up so fast it didn’t feel particularly climactic (which may be due to my reading the story in 2 sittings instead of all at once).
It’s fun and entertaining and I’ll definitely read the next one.
So here’s my slightly modified 2018 review:
Pros: interesting protagonist
Cons: short
Murderbot is a SecUnit made of cloned human and mechanical parts that’s hacked its governor module so it no longer has to obey commands. It’s been assigned to provide security for a small survey group looking at a new planet. But the group encounters an unknown hostile life form that wasn’t mentioned in the original survey report, which makes them wonder what else was missed - or possibly removed on purpose.
This is a 100 page novella, so it’s fairly short. That means it’s light on the world-building and character development. While you get to know Murderbot pretty well, the other characters, with the exception of Gurathin (who’s a light antagonist) and Mensah (the group leader) felt interchangeable. Having said that, Murderbot is fascinating and you really get inside its head.
The plot was interesting and quick paced. There are some tense moments, though the ending comes up so fast it didn’t feel particularly climactic (which may be due to my reading the story in 2 sittings instead of all at once).
It’s fun and entertaining and I’ll definitely read the next one.
=> The next book in the series is Artificial Condition
Friday, 21 November 2025
Return to blogging
For the past several years I’ve been reading less fiction and more non-fiction. Part of this is due to a reduced ability to concentrate as covid and the politics of the world loomed large. I started reading more medieval history books for research to accompany a series of trips to Europe. There were a lot of famous medieval sites I’d never seen before, and suddenly I had a burning need to see as many of them as I could. These were long, stressful, but amazing trips and I had the opportunity to visit so many (SO MANY!) churches, castles, and historic cities and sites.
A few months ago I stopped reading fiction altogether as I devoted my spare time to the final one of these intense trips. I’m back and want to start reviewing again. I’ve been reading the Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells and loving them. I’m able to concentrate on a story again and enjoy fiction.
So I’ll be reviewing and posting again. Not everything I read. Sometimes it’s nice to just enjoy a book and not have to analyze it. But I’m hoping to get a new post up once or twice a month. I'm thinking one book or TV show review and one medieval history post of some sort.
A few months ago I stopped reading fiction altogether as I devoted my spare time to the final one of these intense trips. I’m back and want to start reviewing again. I’ve been reading the Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells and loving them. I’m able to concentrate on a story again and enjoy fiction.
So I’ll be reviewing and posting again. Not everything I read. Sometimes it’s nice to just enjoy a book and not have to analyze it. But I’m hoping to get a new post up once or twice a month. I'm thinking one book or TV show review and one medieval history post of some sort.
It feels good to be back.
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