Artificial Condition by Martha Wells: When Your Road Trip Buddy is a Genocidal Transport Ship
If you’ve ever felt like you don’t fit in, like you’ve done things you can’t forgive yourself for, or like you’d rather watch TV than talk to people—you will see yourself in Murderbot.
Murderbot wants answers. Specifically, it wants to know what happened during its “rogue” incident—the moment it supposedly hacked its governor module and killed 57 miners. The problem? It can’t remember. So, it ditches its comfortable (if annoying) human clients, hijacks a transport ship, and heads back to the scene of the crime: RaviHyral.
Drops post and retreats to watch media feed.
The dynamic between these two is pure gold. It’s the oddest couple in sci-fi: a traumatized security bot who hates emotions and a god-tier research ship who pretends to be above it all but is secretly a worried parent. Their banter is the emotional core of the book.
Unlike the first book, which was about survival, Artificial Condition is about investigation and guilt .
⭐⭐⭐⭐½ (4.5/5) Read it if you like: Found family, road trips with a dash of existential dread, sarcastic AI friendships, and the phrase “I was having an emotion. I did not like it.” Discussion Question for the Comments: Who is the better non-human friend: ART (the murder-ship librarian) or Amena (from the later books)? And does anyone else think ART secretly downloaded all of Sanctuary Moon to its core memory just for Murderbot?