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New Challenges for Murderbot: Artificial Condition by Martha Wells

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New Challenges for Murderbot: Artificial Condition by Martha Wells

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New Challenges for Murderbot: Artificial Condition by Martha Wells

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Published on May 9, 2018

Image: Tordotcom
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Image: Tordotcom

Artificial Condition is the second of Martha Wells’ Murderbot Diaries, after last year’s All Systems Red. It could be subtitled “Murderbot makes a friend, finds it harder to pretend not to be a person, and discovers some truths about their past,” but that’s a really long subtitle, so it’s probably just as well it isn’t.

Murderbot has left its former clients (and possible friends, if Murderbot admitted to having human friends) in the PreservationAux crew in order to figure out what it wants from life. What it wants, it’s decided, is to figure out if it’s actually responsible for a massacre in its past: the massacre after which it hacked its governor module to make sure it would in the future at least have a choice. That means travelling to where the massacre occurred to find out what information remains—and to see if it can jog its organic memory, which cannot be wiped like its hardware.

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Artificial Condition: The Murderbot Diaries
Artificial Condition: The Murderbot Diaries

Artificial Condition: The Murderbot Diaries

You can divide Artificial Condition into two parts. In the first part, Murderbot tries to hitch a ride on a transport and finds that the transport is operated by an enormously powerful research AI: one that’s sarcastic and interested in helping Murderbot with its problems because the AI—“ART,” as Murderbot calls it, short for “Asshole Research Transport”—is really bored. Murderbot learns to trust ART over shared enjoyment of entertainment media, for it turns out that ART gets really upset when minor characters die and cannot bring itself to watch shows based on true stories where human crewmembers are injured. So when ART offers to perform a set of medical procedures that will help Murderbot pass as an augmented human—and not be fingered as a rogue SecUnit as soon as it encounters anyone who’s worked with a SecUnit before—Murderbot, after spending a little while emotionally torn, agrees.

In the second part of Artificial Condition, Murderbot—now awkwardly posing as a human security consultant—accepts a job offer that takes it closer to its goal. Three young persons (I can’t help thinking of them as grad students) hire Murderbot to keep them alive while they negotiate with the shady figure who’s confiscated their data. Fortunately for Murderbot, ART is still around to help, because the first attempt on their lives is killware on a public shuttle.

Murderbot’s not used to being able to give advice or put its foot down about stupid ideas, so keeping the three young people alive is a little more complicated (and guilt-inducing) than might otherwise be the case. In between protecting them from the consequences of their naivety, Murderbot returns to the site of the massacre. It finds no great revelation there, but evidence suggests that it was not inexplicably murderous.

Martha Wells can always be relied upon for atmospheric novels with great voice and precise, gorgeously descriptive turns of phrase. In the Murderbot Diaries, Wells’ enormous talent for voice and atmosphere has full reign in a space opera setting—and her deft facility with characterisation makes Murderbot an incredibly appealing character. Self-conscious, awkward, and self-contradictory: we can all recognise ourselves in Murderbot’s struggles with acting like a person.

I deeply enjoyed this novella. I hope Wells writes many more.

Artificial Condition is available from Tor.com Publishing.
Read an excerpt from the novella here.

Liz Bourke is a cranky queer person who reads books. She holds a Ph.D in Classics from Trinity College, Dublin. Her first book, Sleeping With Monsters, a collection of reviews and criticism, was published in 2017 by Aqueduct Press. It’s a finalist for the 2018 Locus Awards and is nominated for a Hugo Award in Best Related Work. Find her at her blog, where she’s been known to talk about even more books thanks to her Patreon supporters. Or find her at her Twitter. She supports the work of the Irish Refugee Council and the Abortion Rights Campaign.

About the Author

Liz Bourke

Author

Liz Bourke is a cranky queer person who reads books. She holds a Ph.D in Classics from Trinity College, Dublin. Her first book, Sleeping With Monsters, a collection of reviews and criticism, was published in 2017 by Aqueduct Press. It was a finalist for the 2018 Locus Awards and was nominated for a 2018 Hugo Award in Best Related Work. She was a finalist for the inaugural 2020 Ignyte Critic Award, and has also been a finalist for the BSFA nonfiction award. She lives in Ireland with an insomniac toddler, her wife, and their two very put-upon cats.
Learn More About Liz
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7 years ago

This is the first time I’ve ever seriously considered paying $10 for a novella… 

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7 years ago

, this is usually more than I spend on a novella either, but I consider it money well spent. (I read it yesterday.) :)

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I_Sell_Books
7 years ago

@1 Auspex – you won’t regret!!!

 

Jobi-Wan
7 years ago

I forgot this was out yesterday, I can’t wait to devour more Murderbot!

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7 years ago

Love Murderbot!  And love ART, particularly when he was so upset at a movie that he ‘wasn’t even pretending to run diagnostics.’   

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TrixM
7 years ago

So this wee series seems to have a sense of humour about it.

I’m afraid I’ve avoided other Wells’ novels, because I was under the impression that they were all totally grimdark. Do the other books have plot trajectories that aren’t all “life in ruins”?

For a scale, I’m deeply allergic to misery-fests a la Robin Hobb, GoT etc. I haven’t yet made it through an entire Jemisen series. But the Deed of Paksenarrion and Ancillary Justice books were fine (tough in parts, but a reasonably positive resolution).

Sunspear
7 years ago

This moved up to the top of my to read list. Do I need to have read the first volume before?

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7 years ago

Sunspear,

 

I recommend reading them in order.

 

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7 years ago

Oh Murderbot you had me at “I don’t make threats, I’m just telling you what I’m going to do”

this was so good but over too quick… damn novela

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Melita
7 years ago

@6 TrixM, very far from grimdark. The very smart, quick thinking when disaster strikes characters are always a lot of fun for me to read. Her books are actually comfort reads for me. 

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Mary Beth
7 years ago

@6 and 10, agreed Wells’ novels are not at all grimdark. Circumstances may be awful, but her characters are deeply sympathetic and humane, even when not human! Kindness, compassion, selflessness, and teamwork are the driving themes in all of Wells’ work. Even if, like Murderbot, the characters complain a lot while heading to the rescue. :)

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TrixM
7 years ago

@10, 11 – that’s fantastic, onto the “Buy” list, then!

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7 years ago

I wonder how Murderbot would react to being a part of a comfort read. I think they’d object.

I keep gendering Murderbot as female. It’s probably thanks to Gunnery Sergeant Torin Kerr and Honor Harrington that hyper-competent and focused on getting people out alive reads as female to me.

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A. D.
6 years ago

I loved both of these novellas so much. Can anyone recommend where to start with Martha Wells’s earlier work? 

I also want to enthusiastically recommend the audio versions of these novellas. They’re read by Kevin R. Free, who does an outstanding job. 

@13: As far as gendering Murderbot, I thought it was fairly clear from the discussion of “sex parts” that Murderbot doesn’t identify with either male or female. But I agree it’s hard not to mentally put them in one category or the other, especially as English speakers. Good practice though for being sensitive to non-binary folks. 

Sunspear
6 years ago

Martha Wells is my new favorite author. Just finished All Systems Red and started the second volume. May have to check out the Raksura series as well, which wasn’t on my radar before.

Interesting rendering of an AI who struggles with emotion and direct human contact. Calls itself a construct, yet its heart can melt. Also, not specifying a gender, mainly because it does not have sex organs, helps any reader identify with it. Murderbot c’est moi.

@13. noblehunter: Don’t forget Bobbie Draper. In her power suit, she’s Murderbot’s sister.

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Lee Bird
6 years ago

Why are you changing the pronoun? I was pleased to see everyone calls Murderbot an it because it is an it. 

Sunspear
6 years ago

Who’s changing pronouns? in my comment “her” and “she” refer to Bobbie.