All Systems Red

, #1

Knyga minkštais viršeliais, 152 psl.

English kalba

Publikuota 2015 m. gegužė, Tor.

ISBN:
978-0-7653-9753-9
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Žiūrėti „OpenLibrary“

Žiūrėti „Inventaire“

4 žvaigždutės (4 atsiliepimai)

All Systems Red is a 2017 science fiction novella by American author Martha Wells. The first in a series called The Murderbot Diaries, it was published by Tor.com. The series is about an artificial construct designed as a Security Unit, which manages to override its governor unit, thus enabling it to develop independence. It calls itself Murderbot, and likes to watch unrealistic soap operas. As it spends more time with some caring humans, it starts developing feelings that it does not care for.

2 leidimai

apžvelgė autoriaus Martha Wells knygą All Systems Red (Murderbot, #1)

Review of 'All Systems Red' on 'Goodreads'

5 žvaigždutės

I LOVED All Systems Red. Murderbot might be my new favorite character in all of Sci-Fi. I had to read this for my first grad school class at Emerson, and it was an overall winner. Highly recommended if you like Sci-Fi, or if you like character-driven stories that are quick-paced, with decent action and good suspense. I will most definitely be adding the other Murderbot books to my TBR pile.

apžvelgė autoriaus Martha Wells knygą All Systems Red (Murderbot, #1)

enjoyable but perhaps not my thing?

3 žvaigždutės

I liked this, but it was also weirdly hard to pay attention to? Could be that no matter how I try, I’ll never be much for sci-fi. I think I’ll check out the other books in the series eventually, probably when there aren’t 8 billion holds on everything. I liked the snark and the world building enough to keep going, but I wanna revert to some non-sci-fi for a bit.

apžvelgė autoriaus Martha Wells knygą All Systems Red (Murderbot, #1)

I do not remember how I feel about this

3 žvaigždutės

I read this a couple weeks ago and could tell you approximately nothing about the plot! I remember having a nice time reading it? It's short, which is to its credit. There is some stuff about untrustworthy corporations, and the main character is a robot whose robot-ness seems to be a metaphor for neurodivergence of some kind? I don't know. It never really came together but also, hey, it was short.