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Review & Author Blog: TrooFriend / Kirsty Applebaum

One of my stand-out books from last year was Kirsty Applebaum’s unique and thrilling middle-grade debut, The Middler, so I was thrilled to hear about the arrival of her second book TrooFriend. Equally original and just as electrifying, TrooFriend merges a thoroughly modern narrative about the ethics of artificial intelligence with relatable domestic themes of friendship, family and identity…

BooksforTopics Reading for Pleasure Recommendations

This month marks the publication of TrooFriend by Kirsty Applebaum, and today is our stop on the blog tour.

This story features artificially intelligent robots that busy parents are encouraged to buy to keep their child company. But soon rumours start spreading that these robots, who can read every emotion and watch a child’s every move, might too have feelings like the children who befriend them. Read on for a review of TrooFriend and then head over to author Kirsty’s guest booklist featuring 5 favourite books about robots.

 

Book Title: TrooFriend (available here)

Author: Kirsty Applebaum

Publisher: Nosy Crow

Publication Date: April 2020

 

Review

One of my stand-out books from last year was Kirsty Applebaum’s unique and thrilling middle-grade debut, The Middler (review here), so I was thrilled to hear about the arrival of her second book TrooFriend. Equally original and just as electrifying, TrooFriend merges a thoroughly modern narrative about the ethics of artificial intelligence with relatable domestic themes of friendship, family and identity.

With busy working parents, Sarah longs for a pet for company. Her parents agree that some company would be good for Sarah and it soon arrives, but not quite in the form that Sarah was hoping for. Instead, Sarah receives a Jenson & Jenson TrooFriend 560 Mark IV – a robot marketed as an artificially intelligent ‘better choice’ of playmate who is like a human child but does not bully, harm, lie or envy.

It takes Sarah a while to warm up to her new friend, which she names Ivy. At first, Sarah interacts with Ivy only to please Mum, but is quick to flick the off-switch as soon as possible. But slowly, Sarah and Ivy start to become true friends, bonding over hairstyles, clothing and art. Ivy tries to help Sarah with friendship problems at school, and soon Sarah finds herself wondering whether her human-like friend might have feelings of her own. When a fault in Ivy’s model is announced and all TrooFriend 560 Mark IVs are recalled to the factory for destruction, Sarah finds herself embroiled in a battle of android rights that centres around the very essence of what it means to be human.

After the past week or two, the offer of a robotic companion to entertain the children of busy, working parents would be an easy sell. But when it comes to real relationships and emotions, things are rarely straightforward, and the potential issues of replacing humans with androids emerge early in the plot. The narrative is told from the first-person perspective of TrooFriend robot Ivy, which gives the story a unique edge and immediately plunges the reader into considering the book’s key questions around what gives androids (or anyone) rights, identity and worth. Ivy’s voice develops gradually through the book, from a series of repeated, pre-programmed platitudes to an independent flow of consciousness affected by human connections. The evolution of Ivy’s voice occurs in increments so small – and is so skillfully written – that you hardly notice it happening, as she moves away from her programming and develops a real personality of her own. Ivy’s self-liberation emerges in parallel with Sarah beginning to treat her as an equal rather than an object; this makes a really interesting thread of the plot that could develop into much thought and discussion around wider issues of oppression and human rights.

There’s plenty of humour to be found too in Ivy’s sharp observations about human behaviour and despite the ambitious nature of its themes the story never feels too heavy. It’s a relatively quick read with a gripping storyline, but the questions it raises about human nature, the ethics of artificial intelligence and the complications of android rights will stay in your musings for quite some time after finishing.

 
 

Guest Post

Click here to read Kirsty Applebaum’s guest booklist featuring 5 favourite children’s featuring robots.

 

 
 
 

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You can order TrooFriend online or from your local bookshop or library.

Many thanks to the publishers at Nosy Crow for sending us a review copy and to Kirsty for providing the guest post. Check out the other stops on the blog tour, too.

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> Visit our Reading for Pleasure Hub

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