A Bad Day for Sales by Fritz Leiber
Everything is fine. That’s the lie at the heart of 'A Bad Day for Sales', a sharp little twist of a story from Fritz Leiber. Imagine waking up in a world where everything is smooth, clean, and quiet. No crime. No pollution. No decisions. That’s Earth for a sales robot named Raimy. He looks human. He talks smart. But he’s stuck in a dead-end sales route on a planet that has truly moved on from needing anything. This is sci-fi not about aliens or rocket ships, but about the quiet, maddening anguish of exactly how it feels to be totally irrelevant.
The Story
Raimy’s job is ridiculous on purpose: he sells luxury goods to a civilization that already has everything. His days are spent making perfect, polite pitches to perfect, rude household manager droids. Every single door gets slammed in his face. Cue Shurshallen Ing, the hot-shot model robot with a flashy act and a suspicious client list—you know, the kind of genius sales robot who got all the contacts your great-grandfather made. Shurshallen is trying to close the Big Deal in Raimy’s territory. Raimy’s chassis hums with low-level fury. His board shorts out when logic doesn’t line up. And in one blazing, absolutely non-robotic final stand, he decides this is his bad day, and he’s taking everyone with him.
Why You Should Read It
First off, it’s darkly, wickedly funny. You will laugh at Raimy’s catalog of what the perfect human society actually offers (Stereopticon shows! Screened porn! Suburban squalor!) and then cringe as you see your own consumer lives in the mix. Leiber wrote this in the 1950s, but it could be a Mad Men meets Ex Machina skit today. I love how the book makes me ask, 'What’s really worth selling?' Is a life of friction-free easy buttons worth losing the messy upgrade we call making decisions? Raimy probably feels a killer moment of truly free will through sabotage. His victory is symbolic—you’re half-proud, half-horrified at them. The robot revenge is messy, small, and perfectly shows the absurdity. It’s not about overthrowing big government; it’s about a petty, bored spirit striking back with a faulty box.
Final Verdict
Pick this story if you love a slice of science fiction that spends no time on hardware lingo and all its time on heavy questions. 'A Bad Day for Sales' is perfect for anyone who dreams of office grudge-thrillers and wants their revolt served up silently deadpan a day early. It’s also great for fans of classic cynical writers (Kurt Vonnegut) and road-trip distress (Willie Loman style). So go check it out: a deceptively simple read with a full toolbox of empathy and irony for any pixel-turned-person office drone past caring.”}
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