![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As Dex and Mosscap travel across the different ecosystems and villages, they discover that this question haunts them both in ways that neither could expect – but, in true Becky Chambers fashion, ultimately the characters are able to find comfort and joy in simple moments and emotional connections. Mosscap seeks to answer the question, “What do humans need?” and to gather information to report back to other robots, all of whom left humanity to their own devices after the Factory Age ended on Panga, the small moon they live on. I eagerly waited for it to make it through my queue, fully confident that I would love it based on my feelings for the first book as well as my experiences with Chambers’ Wayfarers series.Īfter initiating the first human-robot cross-cultural exchange in the first book, A Psalm for the Wild-Built, in book two Sibling Dex the monk and Mosscap the robot leave the wilderness and begin introducing Mosscap to villages and cities of humankind. I immediately put a hold on the second (and so far, last) book in the series, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy. The previous book in the Monk and Robot series by Becky Chambers was one of the first books I read and reviewed in 2023, and I adored it. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |