Better Than Life

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For the Red Dwarf episode, see Better Than Life (Red Dwarf episode).
Better Than Life
First edition cover
First edition cover
Author Rob Grant & Doug Naylor
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Series Red Dwarf
Genre(s) Science fiction
Publisher Viking Books
Publication date 25 October 1990
Media type Print (Paperback & Hardback)
Pages 224 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-67-083547-1 (first edition, hardback)
Preceded by Red Dwarf: Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers
Followed by Last Human

Better Than Life is a science fiction comedy novel by Grant Naylor, the collective name for Red Dwarf creator/writers Rob Grant and Doug Naylor. The main story was developed, and expanded, from the Red Dwarf episode of the same name.

Better Than Life was the first Red Dwarf novel to receive its first print run in hardback edition. The previous novel Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers only being printed in paperback. As with that first novel, Better Than Life became a best seller status, and was reproduced in paperback, omnibus and audio cassette versions. Two further novels Last Human and Backwards followed in 1995 and 1996 respectively.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

After a drunken party, Lister, Rimmer and The Cat discover a cache of illegal headbands in one of the sleeping quarters, and end up beginning to play. They imagine that they board the Nova 5 and use its Duality Jump drive to return to Earth.

Lister settles down with a woman who looks exactly like Kristine Kochanski in Bedford Falls, which looks exactly like the Bedford Falls in Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life, Lister's favourite movie. He has two sons, Jim and Bexley, and opens a successful curry shop.

Rimmer becomes the head of a multi-national corporation, Rimmer Corp., and has a 50 billion dollarpound fortune. He's married to Juanita Chicata, the most beautiful model and actress in the world, with a massively fiery temper. He's also developed a time machine, which he uses to beat George Patton, Julius Caesar and Napoleon Bonaparte at Risk.

The Danish government gives Cat an island, on which is built a giant golden castle, right out of a gothic fairy tale. The castle is surrounded by a moat of milk, and is staffed by eight-foot tall, scantily clad Valkyrie warriors. He likes to travel on firebreathing yaks and shoot dogs. When questioned about the plausibility of it, the Cat reckons he deserved it because he was so handsome.

Back in reality, Kryten is cajoled by Holly to laser messages into Lister's arms. Lister feels the pain of this in Bedford Falls, and when he applies cold cream to the areas of pain, they spell two messages - 'U=BTL' on his left arm ('You are in Better Than Life') and 'DYING' on his right ('You are dying') These messages cause Lister to realise that it has been Christmas Eve in Bedford Falls every day since he got there, just as it was in the film. He realizes that he is in the game and confronts Rimmer in Paris. Rimmer is dismissive, claiming Lister's lack of money disproves his theory. It's eventually discovered, however, that Lister's fantasy is much more mature than Rimmer's; he doesn't need money to be happy, just a family to love him. Rimmer's fantasy involved mega-riches because of his insecurities (although Lister is still obsessed with a woman he only lasted a few weeks with).

They travel to Denmark and meet with the Cat. While discussing how to get out. Kryten arrives and explains how they started playing, and to leave they need only want to leave. Because his Mechanoid brain is different from human brains, he remembers entering the game, making it easier for him to get out - but he still remains in the game to clean dishes because he enjoys it so much.

However, things change because of Rimmer's massive self-loathing, his subconscious belief that he doesn't deserve success, that he deserves to suffer. Consequently, Better Than Life causes him to lose his fortune, have his body repossessed, and end up in the body of a woman. Upon attempting to leave, he can't, and realizes that all four must leave together. He travels to Bedford Falls in a giant truck, accidentally wrecking the town square in the process, ruining Lister's fantasy. As they leave, a nuclear waste facility and a psychiatric prison for the criminally insane are being built. They travel to Denmark, to discover that Cat's Valkyries have gone on strike, the milk moat has curdled, and a volcano has started to erupt. The four leave the game together.

They seemingly arrive back on Red Dwarf, but certain clues (the good quality towels, the sleeping quarters actually being clean, etc.) make them realize they're still in the game. At this point, the 14 year old creator of the game appears and congratulates them on overcoming the final obstacle, and offers them a replay. They decline, and finally return to reality. Due to their having not moved for such a long time, Lister and Cat's muscles have atrophied considerably, and they have to be placed in special suits for some time to re-hydrate and restore their muscles.

While Lister and the Cat recover, Kryten and Rimmer realize Holly has shut himself off and the ship's engines are dead. It turns out that he had gone computer senile. His companion, an obnoxious novelty appliance named Talkie Toaster, convinced Holly to perform a dangerous repair operation: Holly will become brilliant again, but with a much shorter lifespan. The plan works too well: Holly now has a five digit IQ, but has less than two minutes of run time left. To make things worse, a rogue planet is on a crash course with the disabled Dwarf.

In order to restart the engine, hundreds of mile-high pistons must be test fired. With only Kryten and the skutters to do the physical work, the task is grueling. Things are going well, however, until Rimmer accidentally crushes most of the skutters when he test fires the wrong pistons. They now have no choice, the crew must abandon ship.

Rimmer turns Holly on to warn him that Red Dwarf is doomed. In just a few seconds, Holly prints out a solution and shuts himself down again. Starbug is to fire a nuclear missile into a nearby sun, causing a solar flare that will knock its planet out of orbit and in turn, knock the rogue planet away from the Dwarf.

It's the only chance, but Lister insists that he make the shot: he's a better pool player. The crew reluctantly agrees. Rimmer and Lister set off in Starbug. Lister fires the missile and seems to have missed, but in reality he'd performed a trick shot. The planet is knocked out of the danger zone. Unfortunately, Starbug collides with the 'cue' planet's slip stream, knocking the ship into the icy rogue planet.

Rimmer and Lister are marooned on the planet for weeks, and Lister begins to starve. Rimmer is beginning to slow down for some reason. They figure his remote hologram unit is malfunctioning. He'll soon shut down and be brought online back on Red Dwarf, where he can launch a rescue operation. When Rimmer returns, he realizes the truth: the Dwarf is being sucked into a black hole, and the newly repaired ship cannot escape.

The toaster informs them that Holly told him how to escape a black hole. After force feeding everyone loaves of toast, he tells them that if they accelerate into the hole, they can zip through safely. The experience is damaging to the crew and the ship, but they survive to go looking for Lister.

Lister, meanwhile, is having problems of his own. The ice on the planet has melted, revealing a landscape of green glass bottles. Acid rain begins destroying Starbug, and he makes a harrowing escape. When he escapes the acid rain, it begins raining oil. He feels like the planet is trying to kill him. When he sees the remains of Mount Rushmore, he realizes where he is. This is Earth, it has been converted into a garbage dump for the solar system (it was blasted from orbit when a continent of sewage was accidentally ignited).

Lister, in a panic, promises the planet that he will try to clean up the mess. It begins to rain water, and Lister discovers a tiny olive tree. He also befriends some cow-sized cockroaches. Together, they're going to save the world.

After the black hole experience, the Dwarfers finally go to rescue Lister; Rimmer and the Cat in one ship, Kryten and the Toaster in the other. Rimmer and the Cat are shocked to find a beautiful farm amidst the garbage, tended by an old man. It's only when the man does an impression of Rimmer, do they realize who he is: Lister. Because of the time dilation of the black hole, thirty years have passed on the planet.

Lister shows his guest around the farm, and explains how the cockroaches eat the garbage, slowly reclaiming the earth. Lister has gone a bit odd with isolation; he is still hung up on Kristine Kochanski and has plans to return the Earth back to the solar system.

Kryten contacts the rest of the crew, telling them they've located Lister. The old Lister shuts off the com link, and sends a coded message that what they have found is really a polymorph, a mutant that can assume any shape and feeds off emotions. The Lister-polymorph attacks Kryten, but the Toaster disables it by firing red-hot ashtrays at it.

Lister insists the polymorph's remains be shot out into space, but its offspring returns to Red Dwarf in the form of a beam of light. Using various trickery, it begins to steal emotions from the crew: It takes Lister's fear, The Cat's vanity, Kryten's guilt, and Rimmer's anger. Emotionally unstable, they are unable to form a plan for defeating the monster. When it attacks them, they are only saved when a freak accident slays the beast, which causes them to regain their emotions. The stress of the battle is too much for the elderly Lister, and he dies from a heart attack.

After Lister's funeral, Rimmer informs Holly of the loss. Holly prints out some instructions to rescue a canister from certain coordinates in space. They are then to fly back into the black hole and enter a parallel dimension, where they are to bury Lister and the canister (which contains Kochanski's ashes).

Lister wakes up in a strange hospital in a weird world where time runs backwards. He recovers from his heart attack, regurgitates lunch, and is forced to take a wallet and watch from a mugger. A message from the Dwarf crew instructs Lister to meet them in thirty years (they can't stay with him or they would have gotten younger). Lister takes a taxi to his new home, and finds an elderly Kochanski waiting for him. They have their whole pasts in front of them.

[edit] Alternate version

When the two Red Dwarf novels were printed together as an omnibus, Rob Grant and Doug Naylor took the opportunity to alter the ending of Better than Life in order to clear up confusion about the book's ending. It is presumed that all subsequent prints of Better than Life include this new ending.

[edit] Differences Between the novel and TV episode

[edit] the TV episode

We are first introduced to the game in a Series Two episode titled Better Than Life. The game arrives among other fantastic packages in a post pod, which is encountered after Red Dwarf turns around to head for home. It is part of a series of 'VR Total Immersion Video Games', which work by inserting electrodes into the user's frontal lobes and hypothalamus. The user becomes completely immersed within the reality of the game.

Better Than Life is a game which allows the user to live out all their fantasies and desires. When in the game, one has the ability to mentally command into existence any object, person or environment.

The problem with the game in the TV Series, however, is that it also detects subconscious desires: if the user subconsciously hates himself then the game will eventually detect this and subject him to specifically-tailored masochistic tortures.

Total Immersion Video Games - though not specifically Better Than Life - are later encountered in the Series 5 episode, 'Back to Reality' in which a group hallucination makes the Dwarf crew believe that the previous four years had been a video game fantasy. "Back to Reality" is often cited as being the best episode of Red Dwarf.

[edit] The novel

Better Than Life plays an important role in the two novels Red Dwarf: Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers and Red Dwarf: Better Than Life. The novel version of the game has far greater abilities and far greater bugs. Unlike the TV series, which is based on the original, unaddictive version and is only briefly mentioned in the novel, the novel version causes the user's imagination to develop semi-plausible explanations for certain events. For instance, in early versions of Better Than Life, the user could make a large, expensive car appear out of thin air. In the books, the user's imagination would create a scenario where they won the lottery, or created a successful business, so they could buy the car.

The danger of the game is that once the user starts to play, the game forces them to forget they actually started to play, so they believe that they are still in reality. Their conscious mind only perceives the reality of the game, and all signals from their real body, except for those of extreme pain, are completely ignored.

A person like Cat who has such a huge ego that he truly believes he could get ANYTHING, can get anything, while a person like Rimmer, filled with self-loathing, will eventually create a fantasy in which their entire life is destroyed - Rimmer at one point placed himself in a scenario where he was pimped out by violent escaped criminals. Lister on the other hand had a fantasy far more mature and healthy than those of the others, just needing somebody he loved who would love him in return.

Unless cared for in the real world, a user (or "Game Head") dies very quickly. While it is certainly possible for friends to forcibly remove the headset that contains the game, this results in instant death from shock. The only way to exit the game is to figure out that you're playing the game, develop the desire to leave it and then command an exit.

[edit] Other Versions

  • New edition
The new paperback edition was released in April 1991 by Penguin Books Ltd.
  • Red Dwarf Omnibus
Released in November 1992 by Penguin Books. The omnibus contains the novels "Red Dwarf: Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers" and "Better than Life". Also extras include the reproduction of the text that appeared on the infamous beer mat that the premise for the series was originally written on, a script for an episode of Dave Hollins: Space Cadet and the original script of the pilot episode The End.
  • Better Than Life (Audiobook)
Read by regular cast member Chris Barrie, who plays Arnold Rimmer in the series, and released by Laughing Stock Production in December 1996.

[edit] Sequels

Rob Grant and Doug Naylor went their own way during the mid 1990s, Grant stated that he wanted to do one solo Red Dwarf novel and then move onto other things. Naylor meanwhile carried on writing the follow up to Better Than Life and Last Human was released in 1995. The story followed similar events that would occur in series VII of the television series. Grant's Red Dwarf novel, Backwards released in 1996, would stay more faithful to the ending of Better Than Life and continue from where that left off.

[edit] See also