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Redshirts
December 2018: Geek Reads
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Redshirts by John Scalzi - 5 stars and I want to hug this book for existing
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Nice review and I learned something new, thank you!


I do have a few days. I could manage another geek book before the end of the year.

I am tempted to squeeze in one more, but I have one more Christmas novel I want to finish....


I am so jealous.
Cora wrote: "Have you read I am the Messenger by Marcus Zusak? It is another great meta novel."
I haven't, but it's now on my TBR. :)
Books mentioned in this topic
Lock In (other topics)The Collapsing Empire (other topics)
And this book gets so meta. The premise is already pretty meta: the crew of the Enterprise, er, the Intrepid, starts to realize that their casualty numbers are absurdly high, but only among the lower ranks. Their ship constantly gets into crazy situations that inevitably take the life of at least one crew member, but never the bridge crew. They (and one charismatic ensign) routinely walk away without a scratch.
This is obviously a parody of Star Trek (but a loving one.) But this meta premise quickly gets even more meta. And then it gets even more meta. And then it gets even MORE meta. And then the meta narrative just explodes and my mind is blown.
There is a certain type of fan fiction that is exactly the premise of this book: what if fictional characters were real/knew they were fictional? And while I secretly love that kind of story (re: my intense love of meta), I usually avoid fan fiction about it like the plague. Because most people writing that kind of story are young/immature types who are essentially playing pretend in a slightly more grown up way. Nothing wrong with that. I just don't want to read it if that's all it is.
But this... This is the best example of this trope. Because Scalzi isn't just playing pretend. He's looking at what happens to agency and choice when you have a writer controlling your every move. He's tongue-in-cheek teasing the tendency for older or lower budget sci fi to be a bit overwritten and cliche. And, yes, he's also doing the grown up version of pretend. But it's so thoroughly thought out, fun, and well-written that instead of rolling my eyes, I'm right there with him.