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Six Wakes Paperback – January 31, 2017

4.2 out of 5 stars 3,208 ratings

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In this Hugo nominated science fiction thriller by Mur Lafferty, a crew of clones awakens aboard a space ship to find they're being hunted-and any one of them could be the killer.

Maria Arena awakens in a cloning vat streaked with drying blood. She has no memory of how she died. This is new; before, when she had awakened as a new clone, her first memory was of how she died.

Maria's vat is one of seven, each one holding the clone of a crew member of the starship
Dormire, each clone waiting for its previous incarnation to die so it can awaken. And Maria isn't the only one to die recently. . .

Unlock the bold new science fiction thriller that Corey Doctorow calls Mur's "breakout book".
Amazon Editors' favorite summer reads Amazon%20Editors%27%20favorite%20summer%20reads

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Six Wakes is [Mur Lafferty's] breakout book."―Cory Doctorow

"This is one of the cleverest and most exciting murder mysteries I have ever read. The confined space of the colony ship Dormire is filled with feisty and memorably strange characters who bounce off one another in ways that vary from the comic to the horrific. You like ideas in your science fiction? Lafferty does for clones what Asimov did for robots.
Six Wakes will keep you turning pages right up to its startling climax. Mur Lafferty scores in this, her best book!"―James Patrick Kelly, winner of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus awards

"Mysterious and tense . . . . I wish I wrote this book."―
New York Times bestselling author Chuck Wendig

"A taut, nerve-tingling, interstellar murder mystery with a deeply human heart."
NPR

"An exquisitely crafted puzzle box that challenges our thoughts on what it means to be human -
Six Wakes is a scifi murder mystery of light speed intensity."―p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 14.0px Calibri; -webkit-text-stroke: #000000}span.s1 {font-kerning: none}New York Times bestselling author Scott Sigler

"Lafferty keeps the reader guessing and throws in just enough twists and turns to keep us on the edge of our seat . . . . I loved this book and am excited to read what Lafftery has in store for us next."―
Barnes & Noble Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog

"Lafferty delivers a tense nail-biter of a story fueled by memorable characters and thoughtful worldbuilding. This space-based locked-room murder mystery explores complex technological and moral issues in a way that's certain to earn it a spot on award ballots."
Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Polished writing and a cast of characters who are emotionally on edge make this space adventure a compelling murder-mystery that takes its time revealing the details necessary for readers to rule out possible culprits. The suspense is kept at the forefront of this clever, politically charged tale."―
RT Books Reviews

"Lafferty delivers the ultimate locked-room mystery combined with top-notch sf worldbuilding. The puzzle of who is responsible for the devastation on the ship keeps the pages turning."―
Library Journal (starred review)

"This is a great book with so much going for it: clever structure, wonderful characters, and a fiendishly clever puzzle that you'll roll over in your mind for months after you close the covers."―
BoingBoing

"
AndThen There Were None meets Alien in this locked-room, SF-thriller, which grips you from the first scene in the frozen depths of space."―Mysterious Galaxy

"
Six Wakes is engrossing and thoroughly satisfying, and Lafferty succeeds at both laying down a mystery and creating a stand-alone sci-fi novel."―Sword & Spaceships (Book Riot)

About the Author

Mur Lafferty is a writer, podcast producer, gamer, runner, and geek. She is the host of the podcast I Should Be Writing and the co-host of Ditch Diggers. She is the winner of the 2013 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. She is addicted to computer games, Zombies, Run!, and Star Wars LEGO. She lives in Durham, NC with her husband and daughter.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Orbit
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 31, 2017
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 400 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0316389684
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0316389686
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 3,208 ratings

About the author

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Mur Lafferty
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2018 Hugo, Nebula, Philip K. Dick, Manly Wade Wellman Best Novel nominee (Six Wakes)

2018, 2017 Hugo Best Fancast nominee (Ditch Diggers)

2014, 2015 WINNER Manly Wade Wellman Award (The Shambling Guide to New York City & Ghost Train to New Orleans)

2013 WINNER Astounding (John W. Campbell) Award for Best New Writer

"...the doyenne of scifi podcasting." ~Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing.net

Mur Lafferty is an author and podcaster from Durham, NC. She made her name with podcasting (I Should Be Writing, Ditch Diggers, and Escape Pod) and has written for magazines, roleplaying games, and audio and video podcasts.

She's the author of Station Eternity, The Ophelia Network, Solo: A Star Wars Story, I Should Be Writing, Six Wakes, The Shambling Guides, and part of the team that writes Bookburners.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
3,208 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this sci-fi mystery novel engaging and fun, praising its complex plot with unexpected twists and well-developed characters. Moreover, the book explores cloning technology and ethical questions in a believable way, and customers appreciate its fast pace and thought-provoking themes. However, the writing quality receives mixed reviews, with some customers finding it well-written while others consider it poorly executed.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

152 customers mention "Readability"141 positive11 negative

Customers find the book engaging and well worth reading, describing it as an enjoyable sci-fi mystery story.

"...Lafferty proves she's got the scifi chops to carry this hefty story. And then she takes it and makes it her own...." Read more

"Read for book club. Liked the story and structure. Could have spent less time on certain tech explanations...." Read more

"...point suspicion in all directions and this part of the story is pretty well crafted...." Read more

"...combines two genres - science fiction and murder mystery - in an interesting tale in which almost all of the characters in the book are clones...." Read more

123 customers mention "Sci-fi mystery"95 positive28 negative

Customers enjoy the sci-fi mystery elements of the book, particularly its intriguing murder mystery set on a space ship and its cool sci-fi concepts.

"...palpable and frantic time-crunch the clones are under, to subtle context clues and details that simultaneously keep readers present and leave us..." Read more

"...Lots of great themes and lived up to murder, mystery, sci-fi." Read more

"...Finally finished. The ending was as satisfying as I could have hoped. It was definitely more than I expected...." Read more

"...It gave me exactly what I was hoping for. A complex and twisting plot, layers of motivations, connections, and history between characters and a..." Read more

67 customers mention "Character development"49 positive18 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them engaging and well-developed, with one customer noting how the story and characters evolve throughout the narrative.

"...and twisting plot, layers of motivations, connections, and history between characters and a satisfying ending, all set against a fascinating sci fi..." Read more

"...dilemmas, fantastic but believable science, great setting, great characters, great plot, engaging writing...." Read more

"...has been discovered or solved... just a whole lot of unnecessary rudeness between characters and talking about crap that doesn't matter...." Read more

"...The characters are well developed and the story advances steadily to its conclusion." Read more

65 customers mention "Thought provoking"55 positive10 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking, praising its clever premise and insightful ideas that pose great philosophical questions.

"...; if you will - the characters both learn as we learn and reason as we reason, cementing our feeling of being part of Lafferty's crew on the..." Read more

"...Could have spent less time on certain tech explanations. Lots of great themes and lived up to murder, mystery, sci-fi." Read more

"...6. The morals and ethics surrounding cloning are well explored, and even when you feel like Lafferty is going to send a character into well-treaded..." Read more

"...This is not your mother's cozy mystery, but a solid mix of science fiction and murder investigation in a closed room scenario." Read more

26 customers mention "Pace"19 positive7 negative

Customers enjoy the book's pace, describing it as a fast read with well-timed reveals.

"...I liked SIX WAKES, of that there is no doubt. It's a fast paced and complex murder mystery, made all the more interesting by the fact that not one..." Read more

"...Faster than light travel, generation starships, artificial intelligence, cloning, colonization, alien intelligence are all well-developed science..." Read more

"...It's really slowing down the reading. Also I'm definitely not a fan of this pseudo-omniscient narrator that flips between perspectives...." Read more

"...novelty of a space whodunit with its fair share of red herrings and a fast, rewarding page...." Read more

24 customers mention "Fun"24 positive0 negative

Customers find the book engaging and fun, describing it as thrilling with an exciting universe for characters to interact within.

"...It's not that I don't like this story. It's not bad. It's even interesting sometimes... That beginning: *chef's kiss* But everything that's happened..." Read more

"...Still, it was fun and 3.5 stars rounded up to 4." Read more

"...Six Wakes is not quite like anything else I've ever read, and I enjoyed the ride." Read more

"...I'm pleased to say that the rest of the book is just as exciting and gripping as the first five pages...." Read more

20 customers mention "Cloning ethics"20 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's exploration of cloning technology and its ethical implications, with one customer noting that the scientific and legal aspects are well-researched and believable.

"...the elements of great science fiction: well explored moral and ethical dilemmas, fantastic but believable science, great setting, great characters,..." Read more

"...I liked the depth that went into the characters and the ethics of cloning from multiple views. Plus the mystery/horror of what was happening...." Read more

"...to the point without giving up much, this is an awesome sci-fi/mystery about clones/explores cloning, and read very much like watching an action/..." Read more

"...the cloning technology and the many ethical options are a background that is integral to the story...." Read more

54 customers mention "Writing quality"34 positive20 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book, with some finding it very well written and engaging, while others note that the dialog is not very compelling.

"...She even uses the same subtle techniques to disorient readers as she uses to show when the clones are disoriented...." Read more

"...SIX WAKES, thankfully (wonderfully), is the best of both worlds: engaging writing AND insightful ideas (AND a terrific plot to boot)...." Read more

"...This book starts out sort of slowly and is at times tedious and weak, but it does finish rather strong...." Read more

"...Clueless and loving it. Six Wakes was 400 pages of confusion and mayhem that I utterly enjoyed...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2018
    "All right, who did you become?" Maria asked as her door closed behind her with a whooshzz. She faced her rooms. It was an odd, ghostly feeling, missing so many years. She saw signs of herself everywhere, but someone who was a different person than she was now. She found herself mourning the dead woman, the Maria who would be remembered by no one.

    It is clear beyond a shadow of a doubt why Mur Lafferty won the 2013 John W. Campbell award. This woman can write!

    In Six Wakes she's set herself to a true challenge: to write a closed room murder mystery in space with clones that doesn't get too pulpy, nor too dry, nor too "whodunit", nor predictable. Without giving it all away, the story was so engrossing I never once stopped to try and tease out how it would all wrap up. (Ok, I did once. But that was just because one of the characters said something so painfully irritating I shut the book and thought "Mur, I hope [redacted] turns out to be the bad guy," but that's hardly the same thing.)

    Lafferty makes a number of references to traditional scifi (and particularly clone-related) without ever making anything seem trope-y. From one of the clones testing a food synthesizer with a cracker (the "hello world" of printed food), to Hiro mourning the loss of a pastime he's never really experienced,

    "Hiro missed swimming ... The last time he went swimming, according to his memory, was a week ago. But this body had never touched a pool or ocean, and probably never would."

    Lafferty proves she's got the scifi chops to carry this hefty story.

    And then she takes it and makes it her own.

    It's not enough for her to use a traditional and elegant technique like Hiro missing swimming. She then seamlessly pivots that moment on swimming into a drowning metaphor for dissociation and inattention, in an arrestingly beautiful coup. This, then, carries the reader through Hiro's initial struggle with the reality he's woken up to.

    Throughout Six Wakes, Lafferty uses time as a strategic device to deepen and enrich almost every aspect of the story and the reader's experience. Her skillful use of this device runs the gamut from traditional leaps (both fluid and jarring) between timelines, to the palpable and frantic time-crunch the clones are under, to subtle context clues and details that simultaneously keep readers present and leave us unsure of reality (just like her characters). She even uses the same subtle techniques to disorient readers as she uses to show when the clones are disoriented. And she plays out the discovery of the timeline (the solving of the murders) "in real time" if you will - the characters both learn as we learn and reason as we reason, cementing our feeling of being part of Lafferty's crew on the Dormire.

    And, like all great scifi writers Lafferty invites the reader to participate in a discussion about humanity and morality that winds as a constant thread throughout every POV and every timeline in Six Wakes. I sincerely hope that, when it comes time for humans to develop laws that integrate long-lived clones into society as citizens, this book is used to inform those decisions. Lafferty's treatment of moral questions in cloning are inspiring and perfectly grounded in both today's morality and tomorrow's science.
    10 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2025
    Read for book club. Liked the story and structure. Could have spent less time on certain tech explanations. Lots of great themes and lived up to murder, mystery, sci-fi.
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2021
    Not gonna lie, I had to kind of peruse others' reviews on this to begin to figure out why I chose to rate this book how I did. I found myself agreeing most with those who hovered around the middle, so that's where I've landed... 3-3.5 Stars.

    So, I don't really know how to approach this review. Instead. I'm just gonna post my thoughts as I had them while I was reading the book.

    2.5 Stars as of page 116. It's not that I don't like this story. It's not bad. It's even interesting sometimes... That beginning: *chef's kiss* But everything that's happened so far after that... are you serious?

    I have read 100 pages of nothing happening. Everything is still broken. Nothing has been discovered or solved... just a whole lot of unnecessary rudeness between characters and talking about crap that doesn't matter.

    Also, even though everything is broken and they're essentially on their "last life" at this point, I feel like there's not enough at stake, or perhaps the mystery isn't as heart stopping as I was expecting. It's a lot of backstory and world building that feels a bit superfluous at this point in the story. It's really slowing down the reading.

    Also I'm definitely not a fan of this pseudo-omniscient narrator that flips between perspectives. I would have preferred this to have followed a single clone through the story.

    None of the characters--even the "main" character Maria (who I can't really call an MC because of the narrative choice) isn't really gripping either. They're supposed to be the accumulation of hundreds of years of memories... but they aren't really acting like it.

    Except maybe Joanna, who's just... annoyingly stiff.

    Okay. Page 146 and something is really starting to bother me... I get that the mindmaps were wiped so they can't be updated. But did people in this world really not update those maps frequently JIC? We're expected to believe that these people went 24 whole years without updating their mindmaps once?

    And what about Hiro? His clone is supposedly younger than the others... would his mindmap not have been updated during the previous clone's life? Wouldn't he remember more than the others, because his previous clone was younger? This feels like an oversight.

    On page 247 now. I will say that after the incident in the gardens, things begin to pick up fairly quickly. And I am appreciating how intricately these peoples' lives are woven together. The backstories point suspicion in all directions and this part of the story is pretty well crafted.

    The last 1/3 of this book is definitely a bit better than the first 2/3s. I still don't know if I like all of this "back-splaining" that's happening... I feel like this could have been organized or presented in another way.

    Definitely feeling closer to Maria now, finally. But it took 250 pages to care about her.

    Finally finished. The ending was as satisfying as I could have hoped. It was definitely more than I expected. I am glad that things came together, and enjoyed how the crew managed to work out exactly what had happened. This book starts out sort of slowly and is at times tedious and weak, but it does finish rather strong. Even if I wish there had been a bit more to it.

    The last 100 or so pages bumped this up to a 3.5 star for me.
    23 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2025
    I found Mur Lafferty first with her Mid Solar Murder series, but was excited to see this earlier book she published that I hoped woods have a similar feel. It gave me exactly what I was hoping for. A complex and twisting plot, layers of motivations, connections, and history between characters and a satisfying ending, all set against a fascinating sci fi backdrop. Would highly recommended.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • Cliente Amazon
    5.0 out of 5 stars A must-read for fans of sci-fi and/or mysteries!
    Reviewed in Spain on September 8, 2017
    In Six Wakes, Mur Lafferty veers away from her previous work in both genre and tone, and does so to remarkable success (not to rob her past books of their rightful praise).

    The story’s premise and high stakes immediately suck you in. Tiny details of the intricately built world and its colourful cast are dispersed gradually as the plot unravels through the most effective use of flashbacks I’ve ever seen. There wasn’t a character I didn’t feel invested in by the end, and I often found myself going back to reread these flashbacks to get a better understanding of them and how each of their timelines were connected. Just thinking about all the thought and planning that must have gone into developing this detailed world and its extensive history makes me want to lie down!

    
I can’t help thinking about how this story would sing on the big screen, and I hope someday we are treated to a feature film based on Six Wakes. In the mean time, I can’t wait to see where Lafferty takes us next.
    Report
  • Jeffery Lay
    5.0 out of 5 stars Complex and rewarding
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 9, 2020
    This is a well-constructed story, with twists, explanations, causes and effects that make sense. Sometimes you have to make an effort to imagine how the character would feel in the situation they’re in, rather than how you the reader might feel reading about it, but such effort is rewarded by greater sympathy and understanding of the characters’ actions.

    Everyone has a secret. Everyone has a twist. And while the climax still leaves room for more to happen (this universe has room for a sequel) it’s a proper conclusion to all the relevant story threads, without a cliffhanger.

    One of the more unputdownable books I’ve read in the last few years. I recommend it highly.
  • Perceptive Reader
    3.0 out of 5 stars One-time good read.
    Reviewed in India on January 14, 2024
    A bunch of clones wake up to find that most of their previous iterations had been murdered, with one committing suicide. Trouble is, this is happening in space. Yes, space— where nobody can hear you scream, and also where nobody can simply walk in and kill.
    The killer is there among them!
    It’s an interesting premise. Unfortunately, with every character turning out to be rather obviously unlikeable, with everyone acting as unreliable narrators, the book became a slog.
    And the ending was so ludicrous that I seriously felt like leaving the plot of a murder mystery and entering one of those 'travel guides for zombies' that the author had written.
    It was a good one-time read. That's all.
  • Rodrigo Menendez Arzac
    5.0 out of 5 stars Novela sobre clonación
    Reviewed in Mexico on May 22, 2019
    Muy recomendable novela de ciencia ficción que trata sobre los dilemas éticos de la clonación así como sus ventajas y sus alcances futuros. Este tema se desarrolla dentro de un escenario digno de una buena novela policiaca, pues se trata de un crimen cometido en una nave espacial en viaje a colonizar un nuevo planeta.
  • Eloise
    5.0 out of 5 stars Genialer Weltraumkrimi!
    Reviewed in Germany on May 5, 2017
    Holla die Waldfee! – was hat mich Six Wakes von Mur Lafferty gepackt! So eine geniale Mischung aus spannendem Weltraumabenteuer und Mord-Mystery! Das war wie ein besseres Cluedo im Weltall, bei dem sich die Ereignisse rasch entwickeln. Ich sage es gleich: dieses Buch habe ich in zwei Tagen durch gesuchtet und falls es bis hierher noch nicht klar war: ich bin richtig begeistert!

    Ich weiß gar nicht worüber ich mich als erstes freuen soll. Das Buch beginnt mittendrin im Geschehen. Man steht, wie die Besatzung der Dormire, unerwartet im verstörenden Chaos aus Blut und Mord. Zusammen mit den Figuren gräbt sich der Leser durch temporeiche Szenen, durch die Probleme, die so ein Erinnerungsverlust mit sich bringt, Intrigen und natürlich einen Haufen Fragen. Dadurch macht die Geschichte schon vom ersten Moment an neugierig und entfaltet sich mit jedem Kapitel und jedem neuen Einblick mehr. Manchmal sind es Szenen der gegenwärtigen Ereignisse, manchmal sehr alte Erinnerungen der Besatzungsmitglieder, die uns die Autorin da präsentiert. Alles ist geschickt miteinander verworben und vielschichtig wie die Lagen einer Zwiebel. Besonders spannend fand ich die ganzen Verknüpfungen, die sich nach und nach ergeben, und die Hinweise, die man nachträglich erkennt.

    Das Buch wechselt dabei zwischen den verschiedenen Perspektiven der sechs Klone und deckt schrittweise Teile ihrer Vergangenheit auf. Aber auch die gesamte politische Situation zwischen Menschen, Klonen und Splittergruppen innerhalb beider Parteien, bei denen man manchmal bewusst im Unklaren gelassen wird wer nun gegen wen arbeitet, wird auf diese Weise zum großen Ganzen gemacht. Es ist ein durchweg spannend bleibendes Puzzle, das die Autorin hier abliefert. Zu keiner Zeit hatte ich dabei das Gefühl den Faden zu verlieren, da jede Figur eine ihr ganz eigene Erzählstimme hat. Bei wechselnden Perspektiven gleich doppelt gut und wichtig. Ich muss außerdem gestehen, so unliebsam sich auch mancher der Protagonisten verhält, ich habe sie jeden für sich lieben gelernt. Alle verbergen sie etwas voreinander, aber auch vor dem Leser, und mit jedem Stück das ich mehr über sie erfahren habe, sind sie mir weiter ans Herz gewachsen. Besonders Hiro, der Pilot, und IAN, die KI des Schiffes, haben es mir angetan. Denn obwohl die Figuren in einer wirklich miesen Lage sind, versäumen es Hiro und IAN nicht ab und an für eine Prise Humor zu sorgen.

    Während normale Krimis oft etwas simpel gehalten sind, fährt Six Wakes fast schon schwere Kaliber auf und flicht nebenbei ethische und philosophische Fragen ein. Was macht die Seele eines Menschen aus? Was seine Persönlichkeit? Wie viel Mensch ist man als Klon noch, wenn die eigene Persönlichkeit zu einem lesbaren und veränderbaren Code geworden ist? Wenn es nicht einmal mehr den Tod zu fürchten gibt? Die Problematik eine Antwort darauf zu finden, wurde geschickt in Erlebnisse verpackt und ich habe mich mehrfach dabei ertappt mir all die höchst komplizierten Fragen selbst zu stellen. Es ist erstaunlich wie verzwickt die Dinge werden können, und wie erschreckend, wenn bestimmte Möglichkeiten und Fähigkeiten in den falschen Händen landen.

    Was mir gleich zu Beginn positiv aufgefallen ist, ist die Vielfalt der Figuren. Die Crew der Dormire setzt sich aus allerlei Nationalitäten und auch körperlich deformierten Personen zusammen, die ganz selbstverständlich zurechtkommen. Es war erfrischend auch mal eine körperlich behinderte Figur zu haben, die sich zudem völlig natürlich in die Gruppe einfügt. Das Klon-Konzept in Six Wakes ist überhaupt ganz anders ausgebaut als man es üblicherweise aus solchen Szenarien kennt und lohnt sich wirklich zu erkunden.

    Kurz gesagt: Ein absoluter Spaß für alle Mystery-Fans, der gleichzeitig nichts von Seiten der SciFi vermissen lässt. Dieser Roman bekommt eine deutliche Leseempfehlung und gehört zu den Büchern von denen ich mir dringend wünsche, dass sie auch ins Deutsche übersetzt werden. Leider dürfte die Geschichte wieder so ungewöhnlich und vielschichtig sein, dass sich kaum ein deutscher Verlag herantrauen wird. Wer das Glück hat englischsprachige Bücher lesen zu können, der darf sich Six Wakes nicht entgehen lassen.