Book Review – Redshirts

BASIC BOOKTOMETRICS

TITLE: Redshirts

AUTHOR: John Scalzi

PUBLISHER: Tom Doherty Associates

YEAR PUBLISHED: 2012

FORMAT REVIEWED: Hardcover

GENRE: Sci-Fi; Comedy

NUMBER OF PAGES: 317

Beam me up, Bookshelf Battlers.

On the old Star Trek TV show, there was no worse fate than being – a redshirt. You see, back in the 1960’s, the writers wanted to add a dose of realism, or at least as much realism as possible to a show about a massive Star Ship exploring the universe and getting into altercations with a different alien species every week. When engaged in constant battle with alien marauders, it is a very real possibility that some crew members aboard a “real” Starship would kick the bucket. Sorry, but you can’t go up against that many alien bad guys without someone buying the intergalactic farm.

The problem? Certainly the main characters – Capt. Kirk, Mr. Spock, Dr. McCoy, Scotty, Lt. Uhura etc. could not be the ones to cosmically croak because then there would not be a show anymore. Obviously, George RR Martin wasn’t a consultant for this show.

Sorry, I didn't have any Star Trek toys.  Yes, as a grown man I think that's a perfectly normal thing to say.  Here's the Master Chief instead.  Yes nerds, I understand that one space character is not the same as another.  Take a chill pill.

Sorry, I didn’t have any Star Trek toys. Yes, as a grown man I think that’s a perfectly normal thing to say. Here’s the Master Chief instead. Yes nerds, I understand that one space character is not the same as another. Take a chill pill.

The solution to this conundrum? Enter the redshirts – the extras, the grunts aboard the Starship Enterprise who did the busy work – fetch the Captain’s coffee, stand at a cheesy 1960’s hunk of cardboard with Christmas lights on it attempting to pass as a computer and punch buttons in the background, etc. The writers used these space traveling lackeys as fodder to take the beatings, leaving the fan favorite heroes unscathed.

Watch an old episode of Star Trek. If there’s an away team being beamed down to a planet consisting of Capt. Kirk, Mr. Spock, Bones, and Fred the Extraneous Redshirt from the Enterprise Payroll Department being introduced to the audience for the first time, chances are that Fred would be the one chomped on by a monster, tossed into a volcano, blasted by a lazer, and so on.

In Redshirts, author John Scalzi hilariously lampoons the undesirable plight of the redshirt. Set in a Star Trek-esque universe of Scalzi’s creation, the book follows a group of freshly minted redshirts as they begin service aboard the Universal Union’s flagship, The Intrepid. The newbies quickly discover that strange shenanigans are afoot – namely, that there is a statistically and ridiculously high chance of a low ranking crew member being killed on an away mission, whereas senior officers appear to have almost absurd levels of luck as they avoid death even after being thrust into one dangerous situation after another.

I don’t want to spoil the ending or the various twists and turns but needlessly to say, this is the first book I’ve read in awhile that had me laughing and reading at the same time.

STATUS: Shelf-worthy

Tagged , , , , , , , ,

9 thoughts on “Book Review – Redshirts

  1. I was planning on reading this… until someone packed my books and have no idea which of the boxes they put it in 😦

  2. […] (it’s ok, it happens to the best of us now and then), I was ready to laugh so I cracked open Redshirts by Sci-Fi author John Scalzi. This Star Trek parody delivered laughs at warp speed. A group of new […]

  3. bbshepherd's avatar bbshepherd says:

    This has been on my TBR list for quite some time. It’s been out long enough, I should be able to find a used copy somewhere by now. I didn’t read your review yet, though. I’ll come back after I’ve read it.

  4. A friend lent me her Audible version of it, and I’m glad I “read” it. I DID think Scalzi had more language than was necessary, if any readers might be bothered by that.
    Earth English profanities aside; I liked that he not only lampooned the various glaring tropes of Star Trek, but that he wrote believable interactions, reactions, backstory, and then a bit of a sci-fi twist in there.
    One of my favorite items was The Box: that they just put the problem in there, and it gave them what they needed -plus, that they had to follow a certain dialogue pattern to get the end result from The Box.

    • It was funny and an easy read. Also check out Lock In, which was brilliant. I did a review on that.

      • Just read your review. You didn’t have a link to it from your “Book Reviews” tag so it took me a second to find it.
        Now, I’m intrigued to read it.

      • Cool, hey I’m glad you’re here…I’m always curious how people find my stuff, were you looking for Taken and Scalzi reviews so you found me through google, were you digging through the archives? Always trying to think of new ways to get people over here. I make a lot of posts so stuff tends to get buried and there’s so much I don’t think I’ll ever be able to organize it so it’s all easily findable.

Leave a reply to bbshepherd Cancel reply