ALA Booklist
Cog ort for "cognitive development" an android resembling a 12-year-old boy, built to learn about the world around him. He likes to do word problems and experience new things. Unfortunately, his relationship with his creators comes to an abrupt end once he learns that they want to take out his brain. Escaping the lab with his robot family and friends, Cog sets off in search of friendly scientist Gina, who has mysteriously disappeared, and as their crazy escapades unfold, they learn about pain, friendship, and more importantly st like all sentient human children w to process the world and their feelings about it. Cog is a gem of a robot, genuinely uninterested in world domination or serving a higher purpose. He enjoys learning and appreciating the journey along the way, and his robotic observations are comedic gold as he vocalizes experiences from car crashes to overeating. Readers will be charmed by this sf tale of free choice, hot dogs, and fun word problems.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
This creatively layered novel by the author of Voyage of the Dogs centers on a robot named Cog (short for -cognitive development-), built to resemble a 12-year-old boy. Created by uniMIND, a greedy company whose technology aims to control the actions of robotic and living creatures, Cog is programmed to learn and to share his knowledge, often in comically literal robot-speak (-I live in a room with a bed where I lie down. It is called a bedroom-). Under the tutelage of kind uniMIND scientist Gina, Cog learns to learn from his mistakes; on his first visit to a grocery store, he fills two carts with a humorous overabundance of goods and, when directed to return most items to the shelves, discovers that -unshopping takes longer than shopping.- After an attempt to -learn by making mistakes- lands him in the hands of villainous uniMIND staffers, and Gina is reassigned elsewhere, Cog and four robot accomplices (his long-lost sister, a dog, a car, and a waste-consuming -Trashbot-) use their varied technological skills to find Gina and rebel against the despotic corporation. Beneath the entertaining, madcap shenanigans, van Eekhout-s story raises intriguing questions about free will, fulfilling one-s life purpose, and hard-won judgment. Agent: Holly Root, Root Literary. Ages 8-12. (Oct.)
School Library Journal
Gr 3-7 -Cog is a robot who looks like a young boy, designed to learn about the world around him. Under the patient guidance of Gina, an offbeat engineer, Cog feels safe and supported. When Cog decides to leave the house without Gina's permission, a terrible accident lands him in a lab run by scientists with methods far more clinical than Gina's. While Gina treats Cog like a member of the family, these scientists see him and other robots as specimens to be examined and tested. When Cog decides to break out and find his real home, enlisting the help of other robots in the facility, he learns that friendship, family, and community aren't just for humans. This book does not shy away from dark themes; from the people who do not help Cog after his accident to the scientists who treat robots poorly, the book has many examples of the problems that can occur when people lack empathy for those around them. However, Cog is an amusing narrator and the story deftly balances the significant questions of consciousness and mortality with humor and action. Though the races of the human characters go undisclosed, Cog and other robots are described as having dark skin. VERDICT A sensitive and thought-provoking early exercise in empathy and belonging for fans of Peter Brown's The Wild Robot .-Madison Bishop, Plymouth Public Library, Plymouth, MA