Redshirts by John Scalzi


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Redshirts

Quote:

Andrew Dahl is a newly-assigned crewman on the Intrepid, the flagship of the Universal Union. Initially what appears to be a plum assignment turns into a nightmare. Almost every away mission turns into a lethal showdown with hostile aliens and crewmen are frequently killed, although oddly the bridge crew seem to survive every one of these encounters. As the situation becomes more bizarre and crew are slain by robots, alien worms and - somewhat unexpectedly - ice sharks, Dahl becomes determined to find out what the hell is really going on.

Redshirts is John Scalzi's tribute to all of those unfortunate extras and minor characters whose sole purpose in life is to show up for ten minutes and then die in a feeble attempt to make the audience believe the main characters might be in danger. It's a huge, nerdy in-joke that anyone who's ever sat through an episode of Star Trek should appreciate. Anyone who hasn't (and Star Trek and its cheesier tropes - distressingly - are getting a bit long in the tooth these days) might find the book pretty pointless.

The book starts off as a look at the workings of such a ship from the POV of the regular crewmen rather than the command crew (and yes, The Next Generation did a whole episode about that) but rapidly escalates into being a funny commentary on the aforementioned TV tropes before moving into a metafictional storyline about fictional characters coming to life before skewing sideways into a very ill-advised attempt at pathos (which falls completely flat due to a lack of decent characterisation, meaning we don't care). Scalzi seems to be aping funny SF authors like Harry Harrison, Terry Pratchett (whose Guards! Guards! pursues a vaguely similar premise, but altogether more successfully) and Douglas Adams. However, the premise of the novel is one that Douglas Adams threw into a TV documentary about his own life, explored and moved on from in about five minutes. Stretched over 300 pages, the premise becomes rather thin. Scalzi is a funny writer (though not in the same league as the aforementioned writers) and the laughs keep things ticking over, but despite a couple of attempts to make serious points (most notably in the codas, where the laughs dry up but the prose style improves markedly) the novel is pretty lightweight and disposable.

Redshirts (***) is an entertaining, easy read which will make you laugh for a bit but you will also completely forget about within a week. The novel is available now in the UK and USA.


Great review; I've heard good things about this book.

The Exchange

Pathfinder Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber

I love the depths the crew goes too in trying to stay alive.

The Exchange

Redshirts is definitely worth a read, but (like the reviewer) I felt that the story ended before the book did. I was frustrated by the fact that a cause for the... phenomenon is never spelled out (though the last page of "the main part" implies one.) Still a good read for those who like metafiction. So is The Never-Ending Story, by the way. The book... not the film.

It's a shame I couldn't recommend Redshirts wholeheartedly, because Old Man's War and The Ghost Brigades put Scalzi in my Top 10 Living Author list.

The Exchange

Pathfinder Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber

I miss Old Man's War.


Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber

While I really enjoyed the 'Main Story' of Redshirts, I also very much felt is served primarily as 'set-up' for the 'epilogues'. Which is why I had no problems with that ending.

Of course, I freely admit I started reading Scalzi from 'Whatever' rather than his fiction, so I am likely more partial to his, for lack of a better descriptor, 'editorializing'.

That said, if he ever decides to re-visit the crew of the Intrepid, I'll read it.


One of my favorites.

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