The Murderbot Diaries

All Systems Red By Martha Wells

May 2017

One thing about sci-fi, I’m really impressed with the creativity and ingenuity of authors with the worlds and technology they create to make you believe – well, read along, this is normal. This sci-fi series fits the bill. The Murderbot Diaries is a series of books, with All Systems Red, a novella of 160 pages, being book one.

The Murderbot Diaries is set in the distant future, in a seriously corporate controlled system that spans many galaxies in space. The main corporation, Corporate Rim, owns many systems of planets and they control all traffic on these planets – colonization, surveying and mining. Traveling to these planets must be done under contract from the Corporation and you may encounter hazards from alien life forms and rival corporate entities, which is why it is mandatory to include Security Units or SecUnits in your contract to accompany your team.

These SecUnits are part robot and organic, have extensive memory capabilities and are armored and equipped with serious weaponry. They also have control of drones that they can deploy for surveillance, and gathering information of the surroundings. SecUnits also have the capability to interface with other robots and computer systems. These SecUnits are controlled by the Company and its clients by a governor module that is embedded in the SecUnit. The governor module links the SecUnit to the Corporation’s computer communication and data system. If instructions are not followed a SecUnit may be punished or shutdown and destroyed.

As for humans, all have implants that allow them to transfer data and communicate with each other and systems within their ships and most other units contracted to them, including SecUnits (no cell phones or other mobile communicators needed). Some are augmented humans and have larger memory capability to link to computer systems, but not as much as SecUnits.

All Systems Red begins with a Sec Unit that has hacked and disabled its own governor module and downloaded the entire content of the Company’s entertainment channels (TV series, movies, music, plays, everything) and named itself Murderbot – it watches this media whenever it has downtime. It is on a scientific planet survey with a crew of 8 people and continues to fulfill its duties as a SecUnit without letting anyone know it is now an independent unit; if the Company knew, it would be dismantled, destroyed. So, this SecUnit would rather go off somewhere by itself because its not comfortable interacting with humans but it can’t because the Company would know it is a rogue unit – it stays with its crew, which leads to many entries by Murderbot in his log about his feelings. Its entries is one of the things that makes these books so entertaining and interesting.

YESTERDAY’S MAN by Branco Marcetic

This 200-page book gives a concise history of Joe Biden’s (J.B) record in politics. Why read this if you plan to vote for him? You should know who you are voting for and understand why other people might not. If you know J.B’s record, maybe you won’t be so passive after he is in office. And, because of his record, don’t take for granted that this election is going to be a sure thing. In a nutshell, here is some of his record from Yesterday’s man.

The book’s chapter’s 1 – 6 go from his early family days to present day. J.B’s father, Joe Sr. (his mom’s father was s State Senator), was brought into brought in to business by his wealthy uncle, who had a patent for a coffin sealant and later won government contracts during WW II for armor plating US ships. This fortune was lost after the war – stolen money by business partners. Then the family fell on some hard times. (I guess these are the hard times J.B talks about)

The author noted that J.B had the ambition to become president since college. He went to law school because it was the best path to forge a way into politics. So, from early on, he was in drive-mode to climb to the presidency. He started off with a socially conservative platform to win a County Council seat in a mostly suburban Republican district in Delaware. Then he ran for US Senate against a long-time incumbent. During his campaign, J.B criticized millionaires and billionaire companies for not paying their share, criticized parties for being controlled by big money, promised to protect the environment and won endorsements from labor and environmental groups. Biden, 29 years old, had support of grassroots organizers and dominated his opponent in fundraising (sound familiar! He was once a Bernie Bro?). Biden won! 1973.