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Berserker #1,5

Berserkers: The Beginning

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Reprises the beginning of the Berserker Series in one volume, in which gigantic intelligent machines are set loose to destroy all life, with only one branch of humanity, descended from a world called Earth, to stand in their way. Original.

377 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

Fred Saberhagen

301 books473 followers
Fred Saberhagen was an American science fiction and fantasy author most famous for his ''Beserker'' and Dracula stories.

Saberhagen also wrote a series of a series of post-apocalyptic mytho-magical novels beginning with his popular ''Empire of the East'' and continuing through a long series of ''Swords'' and ''Lost Swords'' novels. Saberhagen died of cancer, in Albuquerque, New Mexico

Saberhagen was born in and grew up in the area of Chicago, Illinois. Saberhagen served in the [[U.S. Air Force]] during the Korean War while he was in his early twenties. Back in civilian life, Saberhagen worked as an It was while he was working for Motorola (after his military service) that Saberhagen started writing fiction seriously at the age of about 30. "Fortress Ship", his first "Berserker" short shory, was published in 1963. Then, in 1964, Saberhagen saw the publication of his first novel, ''The Golden People''.

From 1967 to 1973, he worked as an editor for the Chemistry articles in the ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' as well as writing its article on science fiction. He then quit and took up writing full-time. In 1975, he moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico.

He married fellow writer Joan Spicci in 1968. They had two sons and a daughter.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,386 reviews
April 26, 2016
This is a strange book to comment on (you know me by now about reviews). The reason why I this is a strange book is that it is in fact two books re-edited in to one. The basic premise is that a narrator has a reason to visit and "view" each of the separate and unrelated (and in some cases non-linear) stories and turn then in to a new narrative not present in the two individual books.

Now in general I am against such things as I find it lazy - why create a new story when you can take old ones and reformat them so they make something new and yet is inherently the same as before.

That said there is a theme to the stories used in this book and they do follow a theme which was not really present in the individual books - hence why I have not out and out slated this book. This can be seen by the fact that the book takes the anthology format and turns it in to novel with distinct chapters - (no wonder when I was reading it I kept on feeling deja-vus)

Now I find the whole Berserker series enjoyable although after a while it does feel as though salvation is alway pulled out of the bag at the 11th hour. But considering how old this concept is (first appears in the 60s I seemed to remember) the idea has opened all sorts of possibilities which I think modern books and tv have thoroughly explored and in the process stolen some of the mystery from it is a fascinating idea and one I will certainly explore some more (once I find the rest of the collection in my shelves)
Profile Image for Walt O'Hara.
130 reviews17 followers
June 28, 2013
Berserkers: The Beginning is a repackaging of much older short story collection set in Fred Saberhagen's Berserker universe, a setting where an ancient warfare between two forgotten races spawned the Berserkers-- once thought to have been autonomous killing machines designed to be "ultimate weapons" but time and a long ago scrambling of their code has warped their programming to declare war on all life. Berserkers are the progenitors (or perhaps the heirs) of science fiction plot devices like "The Doomsday Machine" on Star Trek.

I would rate these much higher, normally, however they are not a new read. This novel is a collection of stories from two sources: BERSERKER (the first collection) and THE ULTIMATE ENEMY (the fifth collection). In the old days, I would have rated it at least "Really liked it" but I'm not that kind of reader any more. I enjoyed Fred Saberhagen when I was a teenager for his cool ideas and his excellent plotting. As an adult, he still has cool ideas and excellent plotting-- it's just that I keep seeing the same themes throughout his stories: the Berserkers can't fathom humans at some level, this always leads them to make some critical error. The humans exploit this error and the story usually ends on an up note as the author reveals the "big trick" the humans used to fool the berserkers yet again and win some victory large or small. It's not that I have grown tired of the pattern, but I'm starting to recognize it.

Berserkers: The Beginning is a larger collection of short stories, and that is the creative space where Saberhagen was in his element. I've read many of his long form novels and liked them (particularly the Swords series) and my big criticism is that the plot meanders and repeats itself from time to time. Not so with his short stories from the 70s era. They are crisp, they execute quickly and they don't have much in the way of ambiguity. I enjoyed this collection. In particular, each of the previous collections contains a couple of my favorites. GOODLIFE, from the first collection (Berserker) is an amazing story of a man born inside a Berserker, who has only experienced life as a "goodlife" servant of the Berserker. This might be the ONE story where we actually catch a glimpse of what might have been the race that created the Berserkers, via archive tapes. WINGS OUT OF SHADOW is a story from Ultimate Enemy and maybe my favorite. A historian with a collection of human "persona" that are stored digitally is captured by a goodlife collaborator and a Berserker and forced to wire the personae into a collection of fighters for the Berserkers. The Beserkers don't realize that the personae are actually of World War I fighter aces....

B:TB collects these short stories from Volume 1:

"Without a Thought" (first appeared as "Fortress Ship" in Worlds of If, Jan 1963)
"Goodlife" (first appeared in Worlds of Tomorrow, Dec 1963)
"Patron of the Arts" (first appeared in Worlds of If, Aug 1965)
"The Peacemaker" (first appeared as "The Lifehater" in Worlds of If, Aug 1964)
"Stone Place" (first appeared in Worlds of If, March 1965)
"What T and I Did" (first appeared in Worlds of If, April 1965)
"Mr. Jester" (first appeared in Worlds of If, Jan 1966)
"Masque of the Red Shift" (first appeared in Worlds of If, Nov 1965)
"Sign of the Wolf" (first appeared in Worlds of If, May 1965)
"In the Temple of Mars" (first appeared in Worlds of If, April 1966)
"The Face of the Deep" (first appeared in Worlds of If, Sep 1966)

and these from Volume 5:

"The Smile" (first appeared in Algol, Summer/Fall 1977)
"Pressure" (first appeared as "Beserkers Prey" in Worlds of If, June 1977)
"The Annihilation of Angkor Apeiron" (first appeared in Galaxy, Feb 1977)
"Inhuman Error" (first appeared in Analog, Oct 1974)
"Some events at the Templar Radiant" (first appeared in Destinies, May-Aug, 1979)
"Starsong" (first appeared in Worlds of If, Jan 1968)
"Smasher" (first appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Aug 1978)
"The Game" (first appeared in The Flying Buffalo's Favorite Magazine, May–June 1977)

To sum up, I love SF short story collections with a lot of action and this collection delivers that requirement nicely. There's a notable progression in style between the first "Oh what a twist!" original stories written in the Sixties to the Ultimate Enemy stories written in the Seventies. They later ones are more mature, with better characterization and with less reliance on Deux est machina endings.

Good fun. Not the most complex read, but for what it is, it surely delivers.

Berserker (Berserker, #1) by Fred Saberhagen The Ultimate Enemy (Berserker, #5) by Fred Saberhagen
Profile Image for Chris Gager.
2,032 reviews81 followers
March 8, 2016
I'm coming to the end of Alice Munro's "The Beggar Maid" and will be stuck with "War and Peace" if I don't start something else. This book collects the earliest of the Berserker stories. I think I may have read some of this already in an anthology the author collected called "Machines That Kill." He included one of his own stories. I just started last night I'm enjoying it.

So far so good as I've read "Without a Thought" and "Goodlife," the latter being the story from the above referenced collection. Both good... FS seems to be a very capable sci-fi writer. No Jack Vance perhaps, but who is? A berserker is like one of those humongous Death Star-like contraptions from sc-fi space war movies only without any organic being(s) controlling it from on board. Each is controlled by a sort of random, mostly unpredictable program. Some do have living captives on board. They like to "study" them. Ouch!

Next up: "Patron of the Arts" and "The Peacemaker" as FS shifts to various takes on the berserker "problem" and how humans respond. And now I'm in the middle of a longer story: "Stone Place" - great, classic sci-fi stuff!

"Stone Place" - big defeat for the berserkers. By the way... berserkers are something out of Norse mythology.

"What T and I Did" and "Jester": two less-than-stellar entries which try to focus on humor with not-great results. I guess they can't all be winners.

Ah! Back to some solid sci-fi action. The hard-core stuff if you will. "Masque of the Red Shift"! The Big Hero has disappeared into some kind of space hole with a berserker in pursuit. Will either of them(or both) emerge in a later story? I very much like how the author gives the machine enemies "personalities". They are very Borg-like in fact. The berserker mission(destroy life) is very similar to that Star Trek episode with V'ger(can't remember the title) and the first ST movie, which was based on that episode(I think). "The Changeling"???

Moving along through "Sign of the Wolf" and "In the Temple of Mars" - All these are stand-alone stories but also chapter-like in their arrangement, much like "Pninn," "Let Me Be Frank with You" and "The Beggar Maid". Karlsen is back(as I suspected he would be) and the game is on. The berserkers aren't the only baddies to contend with either.

- More connections: "The Fifth Element"(the movie), Anne McCaffrey's Pern books, "Heirs of Empire" etc.

Moving on through "The Face of the Deep" and "The Smile" as the author is basically alternating between the main story line with recurring characters and other stories that are more separate context-wise. Still solid sci-fi and fun-to-read.

- In "The Smile" - connections to "Alien," "The Thing(from Another World)" and "Forbidden Planet."

Over the weekend: "Pressure," "The Annihilation of Angkor Apeiron," "Inhuman Error" and "Some Events at the Templar Radiant" and the berserkers actually get to win one finally in that last one. I was wondering if that'd happen!

- Wikipedia in space!("The Annihilation ...") is used to defeat a berserker, but in a unique way.

- Sometimes logic is a secondary consideration in a story - in "Pressure" one would think the berserker would be more on top of things.

- Some of the berserkers seem kind of Dalek-like!

Finished up last night with "Starsong," "The Game" and "Wings Out of Shadow" - all solid and typical sci-fi stuff. In many of these stories what saves the humans from the berserkers is some quirky, tricky bit of knowledge or some fatal berserker giveaway based in humanness(and an inadequate berserker understanding of it) that turns the tables against the powerful foe. All of theses are inventive and entertaining.

- "Starsong" - a re-telling of Orpheus and Eurydice.

- "Smasher" - kind of like "Attack of the Killer Shrews" - one of the worst movies if all time.

- "Wings Out of Shadow" - a bit of a suggestion of "Ender's Game" in this one as the berserkers get out-maneuvered again.

- "The Game" - once again a logically superior human mind out-thinks a berserker(they never quite get the hang of not giving themselves away when they try to "be" human). There's always a fatal "tell" ...
Profile Image for Clay.
397 reviews7 followers
March 11, 2016
These short stories reminded me of Asimov's "I, Robot" stories because most of them have humans defeating the Berserker or its agents with some little trick of illogical reasoning, humanity or history that is unknown to the Berserker fleet. Asimov's robot stories were like solving logic puzzles against the Three Laws while Saberhagen's stories don't always equip the reader with enough "future" history or background on the characters involved to "solve" them on their own. Even so, the stories are engaging and the humans don't always win each of the encounters.

One of the interesting highlights for me was the retelling of the "Eurydice and Orpheus" myth using a Berserker controlled nebula as Hell. There is also a continuing arc in the first half of the book through several stories that follows several characters and different encounters with the Berserkers. I'm interested in seeing how Saberhagen teases out a full novel in this universe.
Profile Image for DiscoSpacePanther.
335 reviews16 followers
June 24, 2019
Fred Saberhagen’s Berserkers: the Beginning is pulpy space opera of a style similar to E.E. ‘Doc’ Smith’s Skylark series, albeit published in the ‘60s and ‘70s when the New Wave of science fiction was rising to prominence.

There are many intriguing elements to these stories that should feel familiar to modern readers, particularly if they have watched any of the biggest SF movies since the mid-‘70s. The gigantic war machines named ‘berserkers’ are reminiscent of the Death Star from Star Wars and the V’Ger spacecraft from Star Trek: the Motion Picture, with elements also borrowed by the Mass Effect videogames. The berserker boarding parties of commensal machines sometimes remind me of the battledroids of Star Wars: the Clone Wars, and sometimes of the sentinels from The Matrix. There is an infiltration unit clothed in a man’s skin that behaves exactly like a Terminator. And there is a short section of the book devoted to a story of a hero frozen in a sarcophagus and placed in an alcove behind a curtain in a room of his feasting enemies. True, there is no mention of carbonite, but the influence on another franchise seems plain!

The problem with the book lies in the writing. It seems unplotted and rambling, following a primary school child’s technique of saying, “...and then this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened.” Characters are nothing but caricatures. Heroes are heroic and come up with plans (which are never outlined in the narrative) that defeat invincible death machines with seemingly little effort, and which seem to just rely on ‘man’s’ courage.

Female characters are given even less development, going from helpless victim to vengeful shrieker to hopelessly lovelorn in barely more words than I’ve used in this paragraph here. They behave as they do just to serve the plot, not as the natural outcome of their personalities. They are like Silver Age comic book characters.

Saberhagen has some odd quasi-religious phraseology that turns up from time to time, for example, “The crab-centipede was wrecked, sheared almost in two, as the launch sent something like the Angel of the Lord passing almost invisibly through the embattled ship,” and which certainly pulled this reader out of immersion. I wanted a space adventure story, not a sermon.

However, the stories generally get better as they go on, although among them there is a rather clumsy and obvious retelling of Orpheus and Eurydice that felt a bit pointless.

I’m glad I’ve read this, as I’ve wanted to get a flavour of these stories for a while, but I feel quite disappointed at the quality of the writing, and I’m not planning on reading any of the other ten or so Berserkers novels any time soon.
Profile Image for Paul Spence.
1,354 reviews67 followers
May 1, 2022
Decades ago, Fred Saberhagen created a universe where humanity and a few other species are at war with a race of machines. Nobody knows too much about the machines except that they are programmed to destroy all life. The supposition is that they were created for an ancient war and that they eventually destroyed their creators. Now they are the problem of the entire galaxy.

This is not one story. Instead, it is a collection of shorter stories. Some are very compelling and some were, to me, a bit tedious. This impression may just be because of the mood I was in while I was reading them. They are all old but very timeless. This was a major series in its time and it is still worthwhile today. It is not my favourite but I have no regrets in having read it. I will probably read all the others as well.
Profile Image for Dru.
586 reviews
March 6, 2020
A sometimes great, sometimes not, collection of stories in the "Berserker" universe. I still love the overall mythology, and Saberhagen does a fine job of presenting these killing machines in a vast array of scenarios. But there were stories that just fell flat, and others that were stunning. Hard to know whether I can continue in this universe, with so many other books waiting.
Profile Image for Eric.
114 reviews3 followers
July 14, 2023
Good collection of short stories, mostly independent, set in a universe where machines built by an unknown civilization seek to eradicate all life. I was pleasantly surprised at the diversity of stories in this collection and would recommend this to someone interested in checking out Saberhagen's Berserker world.
Profile Image for Andrew.
16 reviews1 follower
January 29, 2019
Overall I Did Enjoy It and Would Recommend It.
The book itself I had been meaning to pickup for a while. I enjoyed the anthology style of stories, giving the read a glimpse around the universe of the effect the Berserkers were having.
645 reviews
July 7, 2019
Berserkers: The Beginning contains the short stories from the collections Berserker and The Ultimate Enemy. I had never read any of Saberhagen's work before and I struggled with these. What exactly was wrong with them I just can't put my finger on, but I didn't enjoy them.
Profile Image for Howell Murray.
368 reviews1 follower
December 1, 2022
I read some of Saberhagen's Berserker stories on a hit or miss basis in the 1960s, so I liked the opportunity to read a bunch of them in order. There is maybe one dud in the batch, but the rest read surprisingly well for stories from the 60s and 70s.
Profile Image for David Keith.
21 reviews2 followers
April 25, 2023
This is a prime example of a "Fix Up" from an earlier era of Science Fiction. The world and individual stories are fascinating though, and the author explores many possibilities within the world he has created.
Profile Image for Adam.
88 reviews19 followers
April 27, 2024
Certainly has its charm, but as a collection of short stories there is not much of a larger narrative to keep you engaged. A fun, lighter read though and I can see myself picking up some more of the collections if and when I come across them.
1,677 reviews14 followers
January 25, 2018
AUDIBLE BOOK
Berserkers. death machines from a long ago war. Berserkers goal is to destroy all life.
These are collected tales.
206 reviews
July 23, 2024
Short stories in the Berserker universe. Mostly good, loosely follows a timeline.
Profile Image for Hugo.
37 reviews2 followers
July 7, 2010
A collection of pulpy short stories where the heroes are brooding, the women are beautiful and headstrong and the villains are cold, calculating and indescribably inhuman. Originally written between 1967 and 1979, some of the stories show their age, but they are written in the classic "magazine" tradition, often with a twist and with a good dose of (usually rather morbid) humor.

Saberhagen uses only the bare minimum of description and exposition to make the story come through, like many of the "classic" sci-fi authors. I find it quite refreshing after reading a lot of "modern" sci-fi lately, and in this particular case it is interesting to compare him to Alastair Reynolds, whose Inhibitors are very much inspired by the Berserkers. Where Saberhagen can get his point across very efficiently in about 150 pages, Reynolds needs three full volumes to finally arrive at a... um... not really satisfying point at all.
Profile Image for Dave.
686 reviews
June 26, 2010
Sidelined by a foot injury I picked this as distraction reading. Not a novel as I'd thought but a collection of interconnected short stories. The main conflict is the long battle between robotic ships programmed to destroy all organic life and the sentient species of the galaxy working more or less together to defeat the Berserkers. Only humans have capacity for actual violent resistance. The stories are a mixed bunch, some much better than others. Interesting allusions to myth, history and the human capacity for both heroism and villainy. I found the stories uneven. Since the stories appeared in magazines each of them recapitulates the back story of the Berserkers. That could have been edited out of all but the first couple of stories in the collection.
Profile Image for Edwin.
177 reviews3 followers
March 22, 2012
Lots of short stories about a distant future where self-replicating machines are out to destroy all life

I have read this mainly because I really liked the Greg Bear stories "Forge of God" and "Anvil of Stars" where the same theme appears (but is worked out differently). One of the premises is that if you are an advanced civilisation, you become aware of how fragile you are for intruders and as a pre-emptive strike send out killer machines to defeat all life that might threaten you in the future.

Anyway, the Saberhagen stories are an early example of this idea and some of the stories had really nice ideas. However, the writing was not that great and quite a few stories were not very interesting. I don't want to spoil it for you so you have to find out yourself :-)
Profile Image for Paris Chávez.
15 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2013
This book was just ok. It was a bunch of loosely connected stories, similar to I Robot or Martian Chronicles. And like I Robot, a lot of the stories dealt with sort of logical or ethical problems encountered during a conflict with an entirely mechanical foe. I think one of my favorite stories was a warship encounters 2 little ships. One is carrying a bit of technology vital to the war effort. Both ships insist they are human. How do you determine which one is telling the truth?

However most of the stories do not come close to the quality of I Robot. In addition, it is an older science fiction book, so the female characters....are pretty terrible. I enjoyed the book, but I don't think I will be looking for any of the sequels anytime soon.
Profile Image for Christopher.
1,194 reviews36 followers
March 14, 2014
A collection of short stories spanning several decades covering the beginning of Saberhagen's "Berserker Wars." The wars are about self-replicating war machines built as weapons for a long ago battle between two alien species that has long since ended but the machines don't know it and their programming is all that remains.

That programming is to "destroy all life." The stories are very hit or miss, with some being very entertaining examinations of how a completely inhuman intelligence deals with this rigid programming and how certain humans try to outsmart it.

But because it's a collection of short stories, there's less of a coherent narrative and some of the character-based stories suffer for it.
Profile Image for Joshua.
167 reviews
October 17, 2014
I enjoyed re-visiting these stories that I probably last read 30+ years ago. Some of the ideas explored here were still relevant, and the basic concept of these stories - giant implacable machines, bent on destroying all life - has been interwoven into the general fabric of SF storytelling. Taken as a whole, the overall structure of the stories became a little similar - plucky humans overcome world-destroying alien robots - and the role relegated to women in these stories is laughably dated, but I think the exploration of the human psyche and overall tone let me overlook any shortcomings my somewhat jaded outlook found.
Profile Image for Diana.
46 reviews17 followers
November 25, 2012
I am so addicted to the Berserker series. For one, it proclaims on the front cover "your galaxy is toast, monkey boys"....how can you not read a book with a statement like that on the cover - it's insulting AND apocalyptic!

I think what I like is the idea of those dark killing machines (even scarier than Daleks) out there using humans to betray us and calling them Good Life (which means a nice clean death when they're done with you)...I admit I giggle at the Good Life fitness franchise regularly now.
Profile Image for Ricky Penick.
34 reviews
July 29, 2012
This was an experiment. I downloaded this audiobook from the library without having any idea what to expect. First of all, this is a collection of short stories masquerading as a novel. This wouldn't be so bad if they were actually connected by narrative or characters or location or theme, but unfortunately there is not much that binds them. In the end though, it doesn't matter because they are universally awful.
Profile Image for Jon.
Author 16 books2 followers
June 15, 2011
If I could, I'd rate this between three and four stars. It was very good, slightly dated, but very good because it deals more with the psychological aspects of the characters than with the specifics of the science. There are some great character studies and inventive situations that keeps each of the vignettes fresh and interesting.
5 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2012
Good, but dated. A collection of magazine stories, not a one or five novels. I usually enjoy Golden Age sci-fi more, even though these were fine. The read this because I was intrigued after reading a more recent Berserker story. I would be happy to read the rest of the Berserker stories, but probably not in 5 book chunks.
Profile Image for Michelle.
16 reviews3 followers
February 21, 2008
This would be an impressive science fiction venture even if it had been written more recently than thirty years ago. This book is comprised of several short stories tied together with related characters and events. It has some really beautiful things to say about humanity and the nature of life.
Profile Image for Vinny.
53 reviews2 followers
May 28, 2011
This restored my interest in the Berserker series. Short stories, many of them very good reads. Definitely a different style than a couple of the later books (see my reviews). I read this probably 30 years ago, so it's good to re-read and know that I still liked it.
Profile Image for Jason Farley.
Author 13 books59 followers
May 1, 2008
This was a fantastic set of science fiction short stories. Everything from very funny, to very tragic to, to poignant and thoughtful, to a few of the stories that are absolutely must reads.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews

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