Martha Wells is a prolific American science fiction and fantasy author, known for her detailed world-building and character-driven stories. She was born on September 1, 1964, in Fort Worth, Texas, and attended Texas A&M University, where she graduated with a B.A. in Anthropology.
Wells began her writing career in the mid-1990s. Her first novel, The Element of Fire (1993), introduced readers to the kingdom of Ile-Rien, which would later serve as the setting for several other works. The novel was well-received for its richly detailed setting and complex characters.
Following her debut, she continued to expand her bibliography with a mix of standalone novels and series that spanned both the fantasy and science fiction genres.
The Murderbot Diaries stand out for their blend of action, humor, and emotional depth, all delivered through the perspective of an unforgettable protagonist. Martha Wells’s series not only entertains but also offers insightful commentary on the nature of consciousness, the value of empathy, and the search for autonomy and belonging in a vast, complicated universe.
Readers of Martha Wells‘ bestselling Hugo- and Nebula Award-winning series The Murderbot Diaries are baffled by the decision to cast The Northman actor Alexander Skarsgård, a cisgender man, as the titular genderless android in the upcoming live-action adaptation from Apple TV+.
On December 14, Apple TV+ officially announced that it had picked up ten episodes of the science fiction drama Murderbot. Set to be directed by the Academy Award-nominated creators and directors of About a Boy, brothers Chris and Paul Weitz, the action-packed urban fantasy series centers on a genderless self-hacking security android, played by Skarsgård, who is horrified by human emotion yet drawn to its vulnerable clients.
In the upcoming Apple TV+ series, which appears to be based on the Wells series’ first novella, All Systems Red, “Murderbot must hide its free will and complete a dangerous assignment when all it really wants is to be left alone to watch futuristic soap operas and figure out its place in the universe.”
Although Murderbot fans are mostly hyped about the announcement of the sci-fi series, some have also taken to social media to express confusion about the casting of Skarsgård as Murderbot, an android with no sexual characteristics, which prefers “it” pronouns. In sci-fi, some androids are clearly gendered, like Star Trek’s Data, who desires to be seen as a cisgender human man and makes it known that he has sex organs, and they’re “fully functional.” However, the opposite is true for Murderbot. Designed without sexual characteristics, it explicitly does not want to be humanized (in Murderbot Diaries, only sex bots are designed with sex organs).