Barren Cove
A Novel
-
- $13.99
-
- $13.99
Publisher Description
In Los Angeles Times Book Prize nominee Ariel S. Winter’s Barren Cove, humans are nearly extinct and robots are now the dominant life-form on Earth.
The aged robot Sapien is the recent victim of a debilitating accident. The socially acceptable thing to do in robot culture is deactivate, but Sapien is not ready to end his life. Instead he orders spare parts for himself and rents a remote beach house in order to repair and ponder why he wants to go on. While there, he becomes obsessed with his landlords, the peculiar robot family living on the rambling estate perched at the top of the cliff. He is convinced that the elusive and enigmatic Beachstone, the head of the family, holds the answers to his existential quandary. Invoking the works of the great supernatural and science fiction writers Mary Shelley, Isaac Asimov, and Philip K. Dick, Barren Cove is a gothic tale in an unusual future.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Winter (The Twenty-Year Death) follows up his debut, a lively homage to noir detective fiction, with a less successful foray into science fiction: a torpid melodrama in which robots and humans seethe with jealousy and resentment toward one another. In the novel's future world, robots have attained supremacy over their human creators and many blithely disregard Isaac Asimov's first law of robotics ("A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm") by occasionally attacking humans for sport. Enter Sapien, an antiquated robot who rents a beachside cabana in the quaint town of Barren Cove to recover from an accident, and who possesses a "strange fascination with human culture." In the main house next door reside three robots and one bedridden human, Mr. Beachstone. Sapien tries to untangle the relationships among the members of this enigmatic, nontraditional family, all the while seeking a reason to go on living rather than "gracefully deactivat" himself. Winter expertly handles certain scenes a young boy teaching a robot how to make up stories, or Sapien tripping on "sims," a robo designer drug but too many others devolve into stagey villainy or silliness, as with a sexual assault via USB plug. The set up is intriguing, but the badly behaving robots could have been engineered with a lighter touch.