In Charles Stross’s novel The Atrocity Archive and its sequels, the “Laundry� is a secret British agency responsible for keeping dark interdimensional entitities from destroying the cosmos and, not incidentally, the human race. The battles with creatures from beyond time are dangerous; however, it’s the subsequent bureaucratic paperwork that actually breaks men’s souls. Now, in “Down on the Farm,� Laundry veteran Bob Howard must investigate strange doings at another obscure, moth-eaten government agency—evidently a rest home for Laundry agents whose minds have snapped�
Charles Stross is the Hugo-winning author of some of the most acclaimed novels and stories of the last ten years, including Singularity Sky, Accelerando, Halting State, the "Merchant Princes" series beginning with The Family Trade, and the story collections Toast and Wireless. In 2010, his Laundry story “Overtime,� published on Tor, is a finalist for science fiction’s Hugo Award.
Charles David George "Charlie" Stross is a writer based in Edinburgh, Scotland. His works range from science fiction and Lovecraftian horror to fantasy.
Stross is sometimes regarded as being part of a new generation of British science fiction writers who specialise in hard science fiction and space opera. His contemporaries include Alastair Reynolds, Ken MacLeod, Liz Williams and Richard Morgan.
I'm upping the stars on this to a full 5 because it means much more to the later novels, especially with the V. :) It's more humorous as a re-read, too. It just gets better and better. Let's go say hi to the old folks on the farm, shall we? Mad magicians, all! :)
Original review:
I've said it before, but I'll say it again: the juxtapositions are delightful. This time we've got a smidge of Doctor Who, a smudge of Cthulhu, spy fiction, and humorous red tape. Second time reading is still just as good as the first.
In usual backwards style, I saw this cover while perusing my library and decided to read it even though I've never read anything by this author. Going in blind, and it was entertaining in its 'low man on the totem pole' gets stuck with the job no one wants and discovers some rather disturbing things even for his odd line of work. Geeky with Lovecraftian elements and terrifying Nurse Ratchet Daleks.
Sold me on reading the series, now. Good job, short story.
BWAHAHAHAHAHA. This was a delightful little excursion between novels.
Bob is sent to The Farm, a retirement home for Laundry agents that finally got their souls crushed by all the bureaucracy they had to deal with (because demonology has nothing on bureaucracy).
The story is short, but full of wonderfully quiry characters - from the gents inserted for an investigation decades ago to a carnivorous sofa and, of course, the nurses and Matron.
The author was narrating this audio version himself, which was also cool, because he's really good at it.
Down on the Farm is terrifying. There is humour, as usual. There is Howard's ingenuity, as usual. But it all takes place at an asylum. If you thought the common ones are scary and have an irrational fear of being detained there, imagine the one where the Laundry 'takes care of its own'. The Funny Farm even has its own Sisters. I loved it.
Sorcerers go mad. In 's LaundryVerse they suffer from K-syndrome (Krantzberg-Godel Spongiform Encephalopathy), a disease that results from running invocations on the neural hardware in your brain, in contrast with the safe practices of modern computational demonologists such as Bob Howard, who use electronic computers. ("Ah, this is obviously some strange use of the word 'safe' that I wasn't previously aware of." -- Arthur Dent.)
Mad sorcerers are a problem. You can't just give them a pension, even with generous health care. Compared to a mad sorcerer, a thermonuclear warhead is no more than a minor annoyance. Mad sorcerers need to be protected from themselves, and we need to be protected from them. Unknown to Bob, the Laundry has a facility, "St Hilda of Grantham’s Home For Disgruntled Waifs And Strays" (as Bob eventually remarks, "most of them aren’t so much disgruntled as demonically possessed"), for mad sorcerers.
Word of trouble at St Hilda's comes to the Laundry, and Bob's supervisor Andy sends Bob to look into it. Andy has visited St Hilda's in previous years, and it is dangerous to visit St Hilda's more than once, at least if you intend to leave the second time. Thus Bob, low man on the totem pole, gets the job. Bob's challenge is to identify the problem, fix it, and get out with an intact, functioning brain. It's a good story, and becomes important to the later development of the Laundry Files.
was first published in 2008. It's a short story, or perhaps what the Hugo Awards call a novelette. It was recently reprinted along with (another Laundry Files short) along with the novella .
Awesome science fiction thriller / horror / mystery. I loved the start of this series it is tailor made to my likes. This is my first Stross novel even though he has been on my to read list for a very long time.
Great characters. Great world. Great science fiction. Lovecraft! Gadgets. And more.
Než tohle začnete číst, oblečte si tričko s nápisem Doctor Who a s obrázkem TARDIS jako já 😀 Sestra Převodovka a její kolegyně jakoby Dalekům z oka vypadly. Úplně je vidím jak na svých kolečkách rejdí po podlaze a skandují: "Exterminate! Vyhladit!"
Another short story set in the Laundry, like Overtime. In this one, our hero Bob is sent to check on the residents of the Funny Farm - Laundry agents who have gone mad from exposure to thaumaturgical energy. When he gets through enough layers of red tape to enter the most secure wing of the facility, he doesn't find a bunch of crazies... but there is an evil computer. This inspired me to start back at the beginning of the series and read the Atrocity Archives.
Down on the Farm is a short story from the Laundry Files series written by Charles Stross, which is a story that takes place in-between The Jennifer Morgue and The Fuller Memorandum and is best read after the second book.
Down on the Farm has Bob Howard sent undercover to a Lunatickal Asylum � the Farm, a retirement home of sorts for Laundry agents that finally got their souls crushed � not by the extra-dimensional creatures, but the paperwork and bureaucracy they had to deal with. While there, he has to investigate the oddness that is happening there.
Down on the Farm is written rather well. It has horror and humor in equal portion. A retirement home could be scary on its own, but one made for Laundry Agents ups up the fear factor. The story is short, but full of wonderfully quirky characters � from the agents inserted for investigations decades ago to a carnivorous sofa and the nurses and Matron.
All in all, Down on the Farm is a well written short story about Bob Howard dealing with a rather odd situation at one of the scariest places � a retirement home for Laundry Agents � the Farm. It is also a worthy and wonderful addition to the Laundry Files universe � enriching it just a tad more.
Three Tales From the Laundry Files continues the story of a British counter terrorism unit that fights supernatural and alien threats told through the eyes of an employee, Bob Howard. The three novella/short stories are “Down on the Farm (Laundry Files #2.5),� “Equoid (Laundry Files #2.9),� and “Overtime (Laundry Files #3.5).� Two of the stories are in the field and the third is set at HQ with a Christmas theme. Each starts slow, but they all get better the further in you get. All of them are quick, engaging reads, although Stross continues to be enamored with computing jargon and the vernacular of the Laundry’s trade. I plan to continue reading this series.
In “Down on the Farm� Howard investigates a message reporting patient abuse at the ‘Farm,� a facility to help Laundry agents recover from mental breakdowns or to provide long term care. His bosses send him with the feeling they have been less than forthright with him. As you might expect, not all is what it seems at the Farm. Howard unravels a mystery and barely escapes with his life.
I enjoyed this - there's a decent scenario, and Stross does a good job with visual storytelling (so that I can imagine each scene). However, the ending felt a bit anti-climactic. Still, as a freebie, it seems churlish to complain.
I liked the programming reference to "call by reference, not call by value". It reminded me of Niklaus Wirth's old joke that you could call him by name (pronouncing his surname correctly as "Virt") or by value (pronouncing it incorrectly as "Worth").
"La prima legge della burocrazia dice non mostrare curiosità fuori dal tuo cubicolo. È la prima regola di qualsiasi esercito che abbia mai marciato sulla Terra: mai offrirsi volontari. Se fate domande (o vi offrite volontari), verrà interpretato come un segno di inattività e il diavolo, sotto l’aspetto del vostro capo reparto (o sergente) troverà un bel lavoretto per le vostre manine oziose. Inoltre fareste meglio a credere che sarà molto meno piacevole di qualunque cosa steste facendo prima (ozio creativo, per esempio), perché l’inattività è un crimine contro l’organizzazione e deve essere punita."
Una storia fulminante, un gioiellino degno del miglior Stross che sulla misura breve del racconto riesce a condensare al meglio ilarità macabra e azione. Forse la cosa più godibile che ho letto della Lavanderia fino a ora. Consigliatissimo!
3.5 Stars An engaging vignette from Stross' Laundry Series. Bob Howard is tasked with an annual inspection of the 'Funny Farm', that medical institution where Laundry Operatives who have suffered psychological damage during their service (injudicious abyss-staring an occupational hazard) to the organisation are warehoused until they either recover (not likely) or are no longer in an above ground situation (situation normal). Bob must dodge robot nursing staff who have unfortunate Dalek diction and ferret out the mystery which is the real reason his creepy boss Angleton has sent him fishing. That the ending is rather abrupt is probably the only gripe I have. Otherwise the usual Laundry balck humour, in bureaucratese and in roneoed triplicate is de rigeur.
Love this novella as a continuation of the Laundry Series - very clever examination of what they do with the paranormal spies when they have suffered catastrophic injuries on the job and the price you can pay when Higher Math is the source of summoning demons and you solve an equation in your head! Very clever play on the sad affliction of Alzheimer's, wrapped very carefully in the subtext of the story on how we so easily hospitalise people who we cannot help. Does not need to be read in order (fits in after the second novel) but does nicely fit in after the first book. Love Stross and all his works to date!
This is a short story that takes place between books 2 and 3 of the Laundry Files. However, it can be read as a standalone story without any prior knowledge of the Laundry Files.
This book introduces the reader to Bob Howard, your typical Civil Servant from IT, who is tasked to investigated a message smuggles out of the "Farm" requesting help. He finds that things are not as it seems and goes about doing what he does best, saving the day and his life.
I thought the ending was a bit anticlimactic and was hoping for it to be a bit more drawn out. However, it is still a fun book and should be enjoyed by everyone, whether fans of the series or casual readers.
“Down on the Farm� is a short story set in the Laundry Files Series right after “Jennifer Morgue� but it can be read pretty much anytime after one becomes familiar with the Laundry Files setting.
Our man Bob Howard gets sent to the asylum that Laundry agents get sent off to if exposure to eldritch horrors from beyond finally pushes them over into actual madness. Can’t have them babbling State secrets to people, or worse using their knowledge of the dark arts carelessly! However, something is wrong down on the funny farm, and Bob needs to get to the bottom of it before something bad happens...
This is my last one. I love the casual necromancy and the Lovecraftian themes, but the series is written for and by the kind of extinct techie ultra-geek that the late 90s had haunting bash.org and wearing Linux t-shirts.
It's got funny moments but the action scenes tend not to hold up and the constant code-monkey posturing feels like Cryptonomicon fanfiction that you can smell.