Mickey7

320 pages

English language

Published April 8, 2022 by St. Martin's Press.

ISBN:
978-1-250-27504-2
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3 stars (7 reviews)

5 editions

Murderbot, but a little less

4 stars

This was a very engaging read that didn't break a lot of new ground, but did well with established sci-fi tropes. The protagonist was interesting, and there was a good, tight story.

I would say this was about 80% Murderbot and 20% Andy Weir. The core of the book was ideas I've seen used fairly frequently in sci-fi. There were some new ideas and world-building, but they weren't super well integrated in the story. Sometimes the narrator would just take a break from the action to spend a chapter talking about worldbuilding.

I didn't love the way the author wrote women. They were fickle and turned on people too easily. A lot of the book was about Mickey learning self-respect, but he never addressed how Nasha's teasing could read as cruelty. It also doesn't really reveal what Mickey 8's deal is. He seems different from Mickey 7 in ways that …

Good Enough I Preordered the Sequel

4 stars

I figured going in I'd either love or hate this. The notion of being a disposable person with cloned versions of yourself waiting in tanks is familiar enough to me (such as the "troubleshooters", the player characters in the RPG Paranoia) that I've seen the possibilities for how surprisingly dull it can get.

Mickey7 did not fall into those traps. Through cleverly timed breaks for exposition and world building, mixed with just the right amount of gallows humor, I was never caught wishing the story would just move on already or felt the need to take breaks to escape the darkness.

In an interesting science fiction setting of humans trying to establish a beachhead colony on an inhospitable world, Mickey7 shows us how we can process trauma, how our past selves shape but do not define who we presently are. I see a movie is being made from it, and …

reviewed Mickey7 by Edward Ashton (Mickey7, #1)

Review of 'Mickey7' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

3'5/5 ⭐

La versión corta: Ciencia ficción ligerita para desengrasar de lecturas más "tocho" y un personaje que promete.

Buena historia, entretenida y con su puntito de humor. Trata temas muy interesantes sobre la colonización de otros planetas y el dilema moral de los "prescindibles" pero se queda en la superficie y echo de menos algo más de información.

Supongo que al ser el primero de una saga (lo he descubierto al escribir esta reseña) profundizará en esos temas más adelante aunque la trama de la novela es totalmente autoconclusiva y se puede disfrutar sin ningún problema.

En cuanto al protagonista es lo mejor del libro aunque le pasa igual que al resto de la novela, le falta explotar.

avatar for aljague

rated it

3 stars