Murderbot is right where it doesn’t want to be- on a planet that has a weird alien contamination, dealing with a grabby-hands corporation, and corralling humans. Fun times jumping right back in and reading the next installment in the addicting series.
System Collapse is the seventh installment in The Murderbot Diaries series. The series novellas and books are closely linked so it must be read in order for optimum understanding. No worries, it reads quickly.
The storyline is tightly connected to, Network Effect, the fifth book in the series as a continuation so it opens to a scene not days later from the conclusion of that book. Murderbot is physically recovered from that adventure and is now planet side once again acting as security for one group of the combined Preservation and University of Mihira-New Tideland team who are trying to help the colonists repair their broken or outdated equipment and, most of all, keep them from getting carted off as slave labor by the also present Barish-Estranza corporation.
Murderbot is not up to hundred percent, though. It’s experiencing the fallout from what happened to him. Even if it wasn’t needed out in the field to protect the humans with the assistance of one of ART’s bots, it has no plans to undergo a trauma treatment because that’s for humans, right? But, it’s struggling to keep it together and ART and the humans know it. It was interesting seeing it have to handle this aspect of being a bot-human construct who doesn’t like its human parts like this weird emotional weakness that is interfering with its functionality.
System Collapse is introspective through the first half and takes the time to build the pace and tension steadily to a big, satisfying climax of action. I enjoy Murderbot, or SecUnit as the others call it, as the central figure, but the surrounding cast of recurring characters are pretty sensational, too. I was glad my favorite ART was right in the thick of it. ART is the university’s powerful ship bot and SecUnit’s “don’t-call-it-friendship-grrr-or-relationship-ewww” who transferred part of itself into one of its away bots is there giving orders and niggling SecUnit. The lone Preservation member on the team is faithful Ratthi who is a trouble magnet that SecUnit is determined to keep safe. And, a new pair who SecUnit is still warming to (and it takes a long time to warm to new humans if it ever does) are ART’s university humans, Iris, who is team leader and Tarek a specialist with a surprising past.
Side note, there is a romantic skirmish for a brief moment involving Ratthi and someone that was amusing because of how riled easygoing Ratthi got.
The twists and turns building in the action to a stellar finish were all I could have wanted. Some good surprises mixed in there. Things ended at a good place to lead forward to more adventures in the series. If you’re a futuristic sci-fi fan who is open to a bot construct as the lead character, you really must read this series.
I had a good time with the Graphic Audio cast and the sound effects. This full casting added so much to an already stellar story and I liked the way the characters individual traits were brought out- particularly SecUnit and ART.