This Spring two of my favorite space opera series will be getting new books: the next book in the Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells, and the next book set in the universe of the Imperial Radch, by Ann Leckie! For me personally, either of these is a major event, and while I’ve already read them to write this review, I look forward to rereading them when they come out, in order to share the reading experience with pals.
Platform Decay, the eighth book in the Murderbot Diaries series by Martha Wells, will be released May 5th from Tor Books. In it, Murderbot is on a rescue mission, extracting a group of humans from a terrible situation on a ring-shaped station that offers a lot of peril. The group includes both people who already know Murderbot, and new humans it needs to win over – and includes children. Murderbot interacting with children is one of my favorite scenarios, so I am super into that part.
At 256 pages, Platform Decay is technically a novel, but in pacing and scope it feels more like the novellas of the series. For me, Network Effect, the fifth book in the series, is still an outlier with its much more novelistic scope and expansive page count.
Platform Decay offers one adventure with some dips into Murderbot’s recent past to catch us up since the events of the seventh book, System Collapse. If you don’t remember what happened back in System Collapse, I suggest a quick reread before reading Platform Decay. Not because the plot or even the setting continues, but because there are casual mentions of previous events that it is nice to understand effortlessly.
Platform Decay is the first new Murderbot book since the TV show on Apple+ launched and I imagine there are now a whole slew of new fans of Alexander Skarsbot who are curious about the books. To you, new fans, I say: read the books in order! They are all very good and you will appreciate the context as you go forward.
And then a week later, we get Radiant Star by Ann Leckie!








