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Old Man's War #6.1

The Life of the Mind

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Part One of THE END OF ALL THINGS, available in four thrilling installments. The full novel will be available once all installments are published.

OUR FATE IS IN THEIR HANDS. . .

The Colonial Union's Defence Force was formed to save humanity when aggressive alien species targeted our worlds. Now Lieutenant Harry Wilson has an urgent new mission, as a hostile universe becomes ever more dangerous. He must investigate a sinister group, which lurks in the darkness of space playing different factions against one another. They'll target both humans and aliens, and their motives are unfathomable.

The Defence Force itself is weakening as its soldiers fall - without recruits to replace them. Relations with Earth have broken down and it will send no more troops, even as human colonies become increasingly vulnerable to alien attack.

Lieutenant Wilson and Colonial Union diplomats must race to keep the peace, seek reconciliation with an enraged Earth, and maintain humanity's unity at all costs. If they don't, it will mean oblivion, extinction and the end of all things.

103 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 9, 2015

234 people are currently reading
2710 people want to read

About the author

John Scalzi

185 books28.6k followers
John Scalzi, having declared his absolute boredom with biographies, disappeared in a puff of glitter and lilac scent.

(If you want to contact John, using the mail function here is a really bad way to do it. Go to his site and use the contact information you find there.)

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5 stars
949 (45%)
4 stars
849 (40%)
3 stars
228 (10%)
2 stars
32 (1%)
1 star
19 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 80 reviews
Profile Image for Mike.
572 reviews452 followers
June 18, 2015
I'm Rafe Daquin, and I'm a brain in a box.

Hi.
Let me tell you, it feels great to be back in the Old Man's War universe. Scalzi has such a great vision of a cluttered universe where humans must compete with myriads of other alien races for survival. He last left us desperately clinging to a cliff's edge in The Human Division. Turmoil is spreading across the galaxy. A shadowy organization, which had been moving in the shadows (as such organizations are want to do) had just launched a spectacular attack that has further alienated (no pun intended) Earth from the Colonial Union. The Life of the Mind picks up shortly after those events.

So one thing that was discovered in The Human Division was that space ship pilots were being kidnapped and effectively turned into a brain in a box which controlled starships. Rafe Daquin is just the most recent, unfortunate addition, to that brotherhood. Captured by these shadowy forces and given a stark choice: do what we say or experience the most exquisite death possible. When you are just a brain in a box, you don't have much of what experienced negotiators call "leverage".
They assumed they had the upper hand in dealing with me.

Again, fair enough. I was a brain in a box and they could kill me or torture me any time they wanted. That's a pretty good definition of having the upper hand.
But he doesn't despair. He does everything in his power (small though it may be) to stymie his captors and gain as much knowledge about them and their operation as he can.

This book was interesting to read right after finishing The Martian. Both are told (at least partially) from the view point of a character that found himself along in a hostile environment. Both had very little to work with. Both had some practical knowledge to help them out (engineering for Watney in The Martian and programming for Daquin in this book). They stuck with their survival plans, adjusting them as the situation warranted. And they both had a pretty darn snarky outlook on life.
Don't get too excited, that other part of my brain said. You're a brain in a box now. And they can see everything you do. They're probably looking at you thinking all this right now.

You're depressing
, I said to that other part of my brain.

At least I'm not talking to myself, it said back. And anyway you know I'm right.
He and Watney would get along famously.

Even though you find out within the first few minutes of reading that he makes it out OK, I still found this to be a very engaging read. The obstacles Rafe has to overcome, the secrets he ferrets out, just how to pulls off his slight to freedom were all really exciting. Scalzi does a wonderful job giving Rafe his own unique voice and the revelations he uncovers are quite game changing. I am eagerly looking forward to the next installments of this series and all the trademark Scalzi snark that comes with it.
Profile Image for Ron.
Author 2 books169 followers
June 4, 2021
Scalzi does it again. I was concerned after his blooper in Locked In. But Life of the Mind is a satisfying, self-contained story despite being the first quarter of a larger novel: The End of All Things. Scalzi can do it, why can’t all you other series grinders? Well, because he’s Scalzi. Aside from that I mean.

Rafe Daguin is the victim of the dirtiest trick. Ever. He could just freak out forever. (He does freak out for a while.) Or he could fight back. This is a Scalzi novel, you know what he does.

While Rafe tries to decide whether he’s alive, he considers and discards dead because the existence he finds himself in doesn’t correspond to any afterlife he’s ever heard of. Perhaps it didn’t occur to Scalzi, but Rafe’s circumstances sound like some descriptions of Hell.

Scalzi delivers the goods. Thanks, John.
Profile Image for Scott.
1,421 reviews121 followers
August 28, 2015
This is the first novella in the serialized sixth book in Scalzi's Old Man War series and holy crap is it good!

I've been kind of down on sci-fi this year as I've been scoring a bunch of misses in my selections but Scalzi knocks it out of the park again. This novella tells the story of the brain in the box (if this sounds unfamiliar then you need to read the earlier books in the series) from joining the CU to getting captured and separated from his body all the way to his first mission for the aliens.

This had it all...the usual great Scalzi storytelling, amazing characters, wonderful plot...pretty much everything you could want in a book.

All hail Scalzi - he's back!
Profile Image for Lindsay.
1,407 reviews265 followers
July 13, 2015
This is the story that the whole of The Human Division is the prologue to.

Simple, but excellent story of brains triumphing over force. Quite literally in this case as the unfortunate protagonist is the same sort of brain-in-a-box as the unfortunate in the previous book.

Moving on to the rest ...
Profile Image for Tomasz.
947 reviews38 followers
March 16, 2023
This is me, a) messing with the Goodreads challenge, b) getting suckered by Macmillan Publishing :) I don't mind the b), though - I'm fine with Mr. Scalzi getting a few cents more in royalties, if this is how his contract works. As for the thing itself, well, it's a quarter of the novel, can't judge it on its own all that well, now can I.
Profile Image for Serena.
99 reviews
Read
May 21, 2025
idk what's happening in this series anymore. no thoughta
Profile Image for Michel Meijer.
370 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2019
Very satisfying and intriguing novella. Certainly worth a read, even if you are not a Scalzi fan. Five stars.
Profile Image for Joel.
461 reviews4 followers
June 16, 2015
Here we go. Old Man's War, book six, and it starts with a brain in a box. Welcome back.

The Life of the Mind is the first (of four) novellas that comprise The End of All Things, the aforementioned book six in the Old Man's War series. Things pick up almost immediately after the end of the previous book (The Human Division) with a couple of our favorite soldiers and diplomats, and our new protagonist, who like many of the protagonists in the OMW series, begin the story as human and end as something...different.

Fast, funny, action-packed, like a Heinlein novel with the misogyny, this is vintage Scalzi and all the more welcome for that.
Profile Image for Dawn.
573 reviews59 followers
June 14, 2015
John Scalzi. Old Man's War series. Serialized. This rating was almost a foregone conclusion for me. But as usual, the book deserves it. I feel like I'm back in a world I adore - full of clever, articulate people who entertain the crap out of me. I love it here and I can't wait for the next installment.
24 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2020
I’m a great fan of these series and this one has a nice perk for those among us who know their way around computers. The world in general is something new at least for me in the SciFi universe and with live and authentic personalities and a pinch of good humor this makes it a wonderful work of fiction!
101 reviews1 follower
March 27, 2024
Great story

I thought the synopsis made the book sound really dull and boring and I nearly didn't read it. Then I remembered that I have loved everything else John Scalzi has written so I thought I would try it. It is well written but not sure what the point of it is and if it is really going anywhere. Not in the same class as some of the others.
977 reviews4 followers
September 8, 2023
I felt like I already knew this story from what I think is The Human Division (Old Man's War Book 5). I'm not sure it is word for word, but it felt like it, perhaps only a chapter or so in The Human Division, but up to 20% going by page count. Maybe there was something new here, I don't know.
Profile Image for D. Darko.
Author 3 books5 followers
May 31, 2019
Brilliant writer, fantastic series!
Profile Image for Michelle.
1,614 reviews3 followers
November 28, 2020
3.5/5: very good & a bit sad 😥 but Daquin gets in some good revenge 😉 👍
Profile Image for Bruce Maxwell.
16 reviews1 follower
June 4, 2021
Clever idea, well-plotted, quick read. Not as engaging as I'd hoped it would be. A bit of a "meh"...
31 reviews
December 29, 2021
Marvelous bit of transhumanism and revealing of a new set of actors in the universe.
566 reviews1 follower
February 23, 2023
Oh yeah, Scalzi

So much to accept then emotional freighting I must adapt within my smallish mind and knowledge tree. I'm enthralled by the conceptual and evocative logic siblings.
Profile Image for Paul Deehan.
49 reviews
June 30, 2025
Big fan of Old Man's War, but this just didn't cut it for me. Won't be reading reast of the series.
16 reviews
September 24, 2025
End of all things

Wonderful depiction of what is consiousness. A delight of non-stop human species. I highly recommend this book, particularly if you have a sense of humor.
Profile Image for Stephen Bennett.
Author 11 books271 followers
September 16, 2015
This review is for all four parts of The End of All Things, because I bought it as one book. I deducted a star because of the segmented novella installments of the completed book, and for the weakest link, part #3 of the novellas, This Hollow Union.

That said, all’s well that ends well.
I have to say I liked the ending of the series, although it was more political and less military than I expected. It had more of a realistic political resolution than a military victory, which I found quite acceptable. The mysterious foe that is revealed, when Earth Station is destroyed in the previous book, is a nicely threaded threat though these four connected novellas.
Nevertheless, I was less thrilled by the use of four novellas to tell the story, not all of which were as integrated or as impactful as I would have liked. They were told in the narrative of four main characters in each section, which Scalzi does well, but it interrupted the flow of the story for me.
The perspective of Rafe Daquin, a new character in the first novella, The Life of the Mind, was excellent and very well told. I liked the man and admired his pluck.

Hafte Sorvahl’s species background was nicely revealed in her narrative, the second one, This Hollow Union, and I liked her even more than I had in the previous books.

The weakest novella for me was the third installment, Can Long Endure, of another new character, Heather Lee of the CDF. I didn’t feel I ever knew her well enough. Her story was also more fragmented, as it covered incidents on various planets that fit in to the whole story, but didn’t thread well for me in her narrative.

I always enjoyed when Harry Wilson was involved, and his final narrative was my second favorite, To Stand or Fall, where the story is concluded. Thankfully, he appears sprinkled throughout the novel.

Scalzi offers us a peek into the process, and sometimes false starts of writing a story, when he included an alternate version of the start of the first novella, The Life of the Mind. He was right to start over, and he certainly improved that section. To me though, it shows that even his false starts are good.

Had these all been told from one perspective in one installment, I think the overall one-star deduction for #3 plus the novella installments, would have erased that, and earned him the 5 stars the series rates, in my opinion.
Profile Image for Péter Szatmári.
14 reviews1 follower
June 24, 2015
There was a guy in book #5, who has just left his brain connected to his spaceship. It seems he was not the only one in this situation, but a whole fleet was built from ships like this by the Rraey. The new book’s first chapter is a detailed story of a pilot whose fate was formed in the same way ("I'm Rafe Daquin, and I'm a brain in a box.").

Rafe tells the story as a brain, but it begins when he was recruited to a merchant ship as third pilot. At the same time, a famous politician, the second most powerful guy in the Colonian Union joined the crew. They set off, but changed direction in the middle of the road, and later the Rraey kidnapped the ship and killed everybody, except Rafe and the politician. Only the brain remained from Rafe, the Rraey tortured him to cooperate, learn to drive the ship and make practice missions. The dramatic turnaround is that Rafe had participated in the development of the ship’s software before, and knows many loopholes in it...

It’s a longer, deeper and more complex story about what it feels like to be a brain in a box, and what tricks Rafe is able to find in the situation. A great and promising prologue for the finishing book of the Old Man’s War series.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 80 reviews

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