“In a secluded forest in some
far-future Oregon, in a strange little home built into the branches of a grove
of trees live three robots. There is fatherly inventor android Giovanni Lawson,
Nurse Ratched, a pleasantly sadistic nurse machine (short for “Nurse Registered
Automaton to Care, Heal, Educate, and Drill”), and a small vacuum named Rambo,
who is desperate for love and attention. Victor Lawson, a human, lives there
too. He came to Gio as a baby, but at age 21 now, Vic is trying to help his
android father, who has a failing power source of a heart. Once again, Vic and
his robot friends venture to the nearby Scrap Yard, which is filled with all
sorts of discarded junk left by the mysterious Old Ones, in hopes finding
something to help Gio. Then, one day, they stumble upon a damaged, yet
semi-“alive” android. Hap, as the trio comes to call him, quickly imprints on
Victor, who repairs the android’s body with wood and powers him with a carved
heart containing a drop of Victor’s own blood. Hap is an angry, yet powerful android with a wiped memory. But when
Hap unwittingly alerts other robots from Gio’s former life to their
whereabouts, he is taken back to his old laboratory in the City of Electric
Dreams. So together, Vic’s assembled family and dangerous new friend, must
journey across an unforgiving and otherworldly country to rescue Gio from
decommission, or worse, reprogramming.”
While inspired by Carlo Collodi’s The
Adventures of Pinocchio, In the Lives of Puppets includes a bit of
everything, like the Wizard of Oz, Star Wars, The Terminator, Stephen King’s
The Stand, and The Brave Little Toaster. It’s this mish-mash of those
other works that makes the book shine in many places. How far in the future
this tale is set is never fully explained, but it’s clear that human let the
AI’s get out of hand, and like all science fiction that let the robots take
over, the first thing those sentient blobs of wire, plastic, and central
processing chips do is eliminate the weak and fragile humans.
This is where we get some commentary on humanity,
what it means to be human in a world where humanity has been deemed worthless –all
because machines have no concept on what humans can and should do for each
other. So, yes, the book can be a bit sentimental, tugging at the heart
strings. But it’s also bittersweet and funny –especially the excitable Roomba
like vacuum, Rambo and Nurse Ratched, who are literal machines with no filters
(like the constant need to talk about how Victor has to “evacuate his bowels"). Still, I adore Ratched so much –she's blunt and deadpan, who could also be a bit psychotic
when needed. Meanwhile, the weak link is Victor himself. While I felt for him
and his plight, I never felt he rose above being a victim of circumstances. He
never shined, even though his love for his Dad made him relatable to me.
And then the irony of the last human on the planet
who happens to like boys – it would’ve been awkward had the run into a real
female.
A bit overlong, a bit raunchy in places, a bit
out-loud funny in others, In the Lives of Puppets is not a homerun, but still
worth a read.
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