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Emergency Skin

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Emergency Skin
Cover to Emergency Skin
AuthorN. K. Jemisin
Audio read byJason Isaacs
LanguageEnglish
SeriesForward
GenreScience fiction
PublisherAmazon Original Stories
Publication date
September 17, 2019
Pages33
AwardsHugo Award, Audie Award, Ignyte Award

Emergency Skin is a science fiction novelette written by N. K. Jemisin. The story was first published by Amazon Original Stories as part of the Forward short fiction collection in September 2019. The story was well received, and it was awarded a Hugo Award, an Audie Award (for the audiobook), and an Ignyte Award in 2020.

Plot

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The unnamed protagonist lives on an exoplanet colony that was founded when the collapse of life on Earth (called Tellus in the story) was deemed inevitable. He, like all other lower-class people in the colony, has a synthetic body rather than skin, which is reserved for the colony's "Founders" and other elite. Aided by a collective AI implanted in his brain, he is sent on a mission to Tellus to retrieve HeLa cell cultures that his planet needs to survive.

However, when he arrives there, he discovers that Earth is lush and beautiful, not the lifeless husk he was led to believe, and that he is far from the first of his kind to come there on a cell culture mission. He is surprised to see the diversity of Earth's population, including women, the disabled, and the elderly, which his world does not tolerate. Fascinated by this and the altruism he experiences, instead of returning to his ship with the cells, he activates his "emergency skin," a layer of nanites that form synthetic skin, and stays on Earth to learn more.

An old man brings him to a museum and shows him what happened after the Founders left the planet to form their colony: everyone left on Earth abandoned country borders and individual property, pooling all their resources and working together to prevent the planet's destruction. The protagonist realizes that the Founders deliberately kept this information from everyone else on the colony so that they could continue to hoard resources as the elite, and that they kill everyone who returns from missions to Earth so that they cannot tell anyone the truth. Furthermore, the cell cultures are needed by his planet's elites in order to maintain their immortality, not just for their survival. The story ends with him disabling the collective AI in his brain and resolving to return to his colony to start a revolution against the Founders.

Reception

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Kirkus Reviews called it a subversive story that "shatters all expectations".[1] AudioFile reviewer Emily Connelly found that the brief story cleverly conveyed both alarm and curiosity as to how the thriving society story could sustain itself. She also praised the audio performance of Jason Isaacs for immersing listeners in the story as if they were on the mission as well, giving it an Earphone Award for the month.[2] The story was later collected in The Year’s Best Science Fiction, Vol 1: The Saga Anthology of Science Fiction 2020 as well, where Publishers Weekly highlighted it as a standout of the "year's best" anthology.[3]

Accolades

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In 2020, Emergency Skin received the following awards and nominations:

Award Result Ref.
Audie Award for Science Fiction Won [4]
Hugo Award for Best Novelette Won [5]
Ignyte Award for Best Novelette Won [6]
Locus Award for Best Novelette Nominated [7]

References

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  1. ^ "EMERGENCY SKIN | Kirkus Reviews". Kirkus Reviews. September 16, 2019.
  2. ^ Connelly, Emily (October 2019). "EMERGENCY SKIN by NK Jemisin Read by Jason Isaacs | Audiobook Review". AudioFile Magazine.
  3. ^ "Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror Book Review: The Year's Best Science Fiction, Vol 1: The Saga Anthology of Science Fiction 2020 by Edited by Jonathan Strahan. Saga, $17.99 trade paper (608p) ISBN 978-1-5344-4959-6". Publishers Weekly. July 13, 2020.
  4. ^ Maher, John (March 3, 2020). "A Buoyant 2020 Audie Awards Celebrates 'The Only Plane in the Sky,' Stephen King". Publishers Weekly.
  5. ^ "2020 Hugo, Lodestar, and Astounding Awards Winners". Locus Online. August 1, 2020. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  6. ^ Tejada, Andrew (October 17, 2020). "Announcing the Winners of the Inaugural Ignyte Awards!". Tor.com.
  7. ^ "N. K. Jemisin Awards". Science Fiction Awards Database. Locus Science Fiction Foundation. Retrieved September 30, 2021.