My youngest and I have joined my oldest in the ‘I read all 15 Battle of the Books Titles’ club! (Not that there’s an actual club, but still.) My middles both came within 2 or 3 their last year of elementary school–enough to compete on teams and do well–but my oldest read all of hers and was supposed to go on to District competition, thwarted only by poor scheduling on the school district’s part. (She had to choose between performing with Broadway Kids or competing, and she cried over that decision. I was SO upset on her behalf.) Tonight my youngest and I finished this year’s last title together, and so she gets her Book Fair gift certificate and I get–the glory. So to speak.
Anyone who knows me will not be surprised that I put the sci-fi title off until last; that’s not a genre I pick up on my own. Eventually, however, I realized I was too close to reading all 15 to give up within sight of the finish line, and so I started Lee Bacon’s The Last Human on audio. When I couldn’t concentrate on it in audio, however, I asked my youngest if we should read it together.* She was thrilled to acquiesce, and I knew her drive to get to 15 would keep me on target, and so–the rest is history. (As of tonight.)
Anyway. As much as I hope never to read another binary number aloud again (SO MANY CHAPTERS, ALL NUMBERED IN BINARY!!), the story definitely sucked me in. Thirty-ish years previously robots judged humanity–with its propensity for violence, greed, and excess–to be an imminent threat to Earth, and so robots eliminated that threat. Robotkind is thus living in harmony when XR_935 encounters a human girl hiding on the solar farm where he works. It is impossible, and yet there Emma is; she was born in a bunker and lived there with her parents until everyone in the bunker got sick. (Everyone else, that is.) Now she’s determined to reach a spot on a map her father gave her, and XR and his two robot teammates can either assume she (as a human) is a threat and eliminate her, or–help? What follows is a definitely original take on the dangerous journey/quest trope, with threats and a destination that prove to be surprisingly complicated/not complicated at the same time. Hardcore sci-fi fans are likely to find some plot holes, but Last Human is an interesting story engagingly told; I found I actually enjoyed it. Let me know what you think!
In the meantime, this week I got my hair cut, went to the temple, took my son to the doctor and the orthodontist, and spent three of five weekday mornings at the school. I did survive our PTA meeting and book fair setup, but I have various children emotional over various things, tomorrow will be busy, and Monday and Tuesday will be even busier. Wish me luck!
*I’m fully aware that I used ‘however’ in two consecutive sentences, but it’s 9:38 and nothing else is coming to mind. My bad.