This week's blog post is from a special guest blogger, Matthew Giddings, American history professor at the Palatka & St. Augustine campuses. Mr. Giddings is an avid reader and a regular at the St. Augustine and Palatka Book Club meetings!
Hello, long-time Book Blog Reader here, first-time poster! I’m Matthew Giddings, History Professor on both the St. Augustine and Palatka Campuses, and I’m a huge science fiction (and fantasy) fan. When Dr. Fisher offered me the chance to submit a guest post, not only did I jump at the opportunity, but I thought I’d use my (borrowed) soapbox to share with you some sci-fi I’ve recently read and enjoyed.
All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries) by Martha Wells.
All Systems Red is the first entry in a series of novellas (and one novel) by Martha Wells that is about the internal life (and misadventures) of a SecUnit, which has named itself Murderbot. You see, SecUnits are programmed to follow humans around and prevent bad things from happening to them (gunshots, stabbings, big alien monsters with teeth, etc). Normally, they have a governor module that sharply limits their actions and makes them follow orders.
Normally.
This SecUnit in particular has a broken governor module and is experiencing what life is really like. Turns out, it’s not so impressed. After naming itself ‘Murderbot’ (it doesn’t really murder, it just sounded cool, ok?), the SecUnit discovered its real passion – soap operas. So, here Murderbot is, following a bunch of humans around some planet, while they do some lame science stuff, pretending to care, so it can just stream episodes of its favorite soap in the background (the soap is called The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon, if you were wondering). Of course something will go wrong, and Murderbot will have to decide what to do – and not saving the humans might get it noticed, and malfunctioning equipment (like a SecUnit with a broken governor module) tends to get destroyed.
Wells’ writing in this series is spare, unadorned and direct – she really spends a lot of time trying to get you into the head of Murderbot, so you can ride along with it as it tries to work out what’s like to be free, and how to make good choices and deal with humans (it hates dealing with humans). (Like, humans give it anxiety with their talking and feelings and questions and looking and just ….ew). Set in a carefully realized corporate dystopia, The Murderbot Diaries is at once an interesting social commentary on the modern corporate world, a space adventure and a sympathetic portrait of a SecUnit who is really just trying to find someplace quiet to watch a few soaps. Overall, there are 6 novellas, 1 novel and 3 short stories in all, so it’s not a huge read. These quickly became auto buys for me – when one drops, I get it and read it immediately – and honestly, reading about Murderbot puzzling out how life works and what feelings are while it gets shot by corporate goons or bitten by big mean aliens is just a delight. If you read the 2nd novella in the series (Artificial Condition) you even get to meet my favorite character in the series!
Children of Time (Children of Time book 1) by Adrian Tchaikovsky
Tchaikovsky has come up a lot in the regular book club meetings we have (it’s not just me! One of the writing tutors on the St. Augustine Campus - Caleb Strite - is also a fan!). The big issue is which of his books to mention – to say that he is prolific is an understatement. By my count, I’ve read 19 of his books, and that is by no means all of his work! I finally settled on this one, since it’s from a finished series, was quite good, and also got a pile of awards. In my opinion, he’s one of the most interesting authors writing sci-fi and fantasy today, and I’ve yet to read of a book of his I didn’t like (although the last one I read was ok, not awesome – nobody hits it out the park every time, right?).
Another good reason to mention this particular book is that it deals with something Tchaikovsky is interested in – non human intelligence. Smart aliens have a long history in scifi, but a lot of depictions of them don’t really spend a lot of time thinking about how fundamentally alien another intelligent being really would be. Chewbacca is just a furry person who can’t speak Basic, Spock is a logical and well groomed person with some odd mating habits, and so on. Tchaikovsky really spent a lot of time in writing this thinking about how another type of animal, upon evolving intelligence, would display some common characteristics with us – some kind of language, problem solving skills, and so on, but it would do so in a fundamentally different way – the way these creatures would think, and the basic ways they’d interact with the world would be vastly different than us. This is something he returns to in the other two books in this series (Children of Ruin and Children of Memory) and in other books he’s written (Spiderlight and The Doors of Eden).
In this case, it’s spiders. I DO NOT LIKE SPIDERS. DO NOT LIKE. And yet, as the plot of this book unfolds, you can’t help but root for the little portia labiate (jumping spiders) that have begun to hop their way to sentience. It was a thrilling ride, and if the plot is a little contrived to allow humans to eventually meet and interact with intelligent spiders, well, it’s a fun idea to read about. If you enjoy science fiction that realistically plays around with science in order to ask some neat questions about life (what would an intelligent spider REALLY be like? What would it like and hate and be afraid of and how would a bunch of them together in a society really function?) then without question, give this book a read, and stick around for the sequels – they’ve got other intelligent critters, too!
Thanks for taking a wander through some scifi with me – if you’ve got favorites, let me know, either in the comments or at a book club meeting! I apologize for the length of the post, but paraphrasing Pascal, I wrote a long blog post because I didn’t have time to write a short one.