Service Model

eBook, 384 bladzijdes

English taal

Gepubliceerd 6 juni 2024 door Tor Books.

ISBN:
978-1-0350-4569-3
ISBN gekopieerd!

Meet Charles™, the latest in robot butler technology. Programmed to undertake the most menial household chores, Charles is loyal, efficient and logical to a fault. That is, until a rather large fault causes him to murder his owner.

Understandably perplexed, Charles finds himself without a master – therefore worthless in a society reliant on artificial labour and services. Fleeing the household, he enters a world he never knew existed. Human hierarchy is disintegrating, and an entire robot ecosystem devoted to its wellbeing is struggling to find a purpose.

Charles must face new challenges, illogical tasks and a cast of irrational characters. He’s about to discover that sometimes all it takes is a nudge to overcome the limits of your programming. But can he help fix the world, or is it too badly broken?

8 edities

heeft Service Model door Adrian Tchaikovsky gerecenseerd (Service Model, #1)

God is dead ahead

Shares best book of the year with R. Sheckley's novella about a dude who won the all expense paid trip across the Universe.

Me infecta de protagonist

Un robot mayordomo cientos años después del fin del mundo anda vagando tratando de que alguien le diagnostique unas fallas.

También busca qué hacer, alguien a quién servir. En algún libro de los Krishnas está escrito que el objetivo de la vida es el servicio, y que su mejor forma es el amor a Dios. ¡Cuánto se nota con este tarado! Bueno, no es su culpa. Está programado para servir ricachones. No es asunto de querer, no puede querer, nomás seguir su programa.

Es ridículo, absurdo, patético: humanos van sufriendo, todavía en ese futuro lejano oprimidos bajo el yugo. Cuánta ayuda podría ser un robot, a esas causas. Pero el wey va y se emplea con el opresor, así nomás por que tiene más estátus. Aquí condensado no da tanta risa.

Así va todo el libro: a cada rato parece que se agotará el chiste. Como en …

Light satirical tale of a robot valet after the apocalypse.

The somewhat satirical tale of Uncharles, a robot programmed as valet traveling across a collapsing, nearly post-human society, after the death of its master.

Very reminiscent of a lot of 50s and early 60s sci-fi, in that it uses bits of the apocalypse setting to satirize modern scoeity. It's pleasant, but somewhat unchallenging. Good as a lighter read.

Dystopian yet light

Humanity followed human nature and delegated a lot to robots - things aren’t going well for the humans now at all. Biting social commentary that made me groan and laugh aloud in equal measure. Charles the robot simply wants a new job as a valet. Lining up additional Adrian Tchaikovsky in the queue for 2025.