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A Robot Shows Us Humanity at its Best in Today I Am Carey

A Robot Shows Us Humanity at its Best in Today I Am Carey

Today I Am CareyMartin L. Shoemaker’s debut novel (an expansion of his award-winning short story “Today I am Paul”), is a celebration of the best parts of being human—never mind that the narrator isn’t one.

]The novel follows its robot narrator from its first moments of sapience, through its adoption by a human family and its years of service to them. As Carey’s existence persists—beyond the death of those it was made to help, beyond its own increasing obsolescence—its slowly begins to understand more and more about the stuff of humanity: imagination, empathy, friendship, loss. Its sense of self begins to grow, then blossom. While that would be story enough for a novel—and has been— Shoemaker uses this decades-spanning framework to explore what we humans truly mean to each other, and the difference love, support, and caring about others can make in a life. It’s a novel generous in spirit and rich with emotion, exploring what makes Carey—and all of us—unique, and worth cherishing.

Today I Am Carey

Martin L. Shoemaker

5

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Other books have considered the emergence of sapience in an artificial intelligence, but few have done so with as much idealism or as celebratory a tone. While the journey through Carey’s life and eventual “death” isn’t without its ups and downs and various conflicts, Shoemaker is interested more in Carey’s experience of everyday life, of emotions, of the ineffably human concepts it grapples with as it “grows up.” It’s an approach that makes the book a true delight to read— following people who care about and for each other, with Carey (“it” pronoun notwithstanding) being assured over and over that it is every bit as much an autonomous being as any human: the Owenses give it a bedroom of its own, and include Carey; it develops a true friendship with an old juggler at an assisted-care facility where Carey eventually comes to work (they two end up founding an ad-hoc circus together).

The novel’s deep compassion for its characters—human and robot alike—helps underscore the sadder or more intense moments. When you’ve seen Carey and his human companions at their best, watching them struggle together—Carey is forced to deliver Millie’s child amid a terrible car accident, and must later watch as its friends and family grow older and more inform while it… does not—is all the more powerful. The drama in this novel, then, comes not so much from the realm of the science-fictional, but from the drama and tension of life’s common moments.

Clarkesworld Magazine Issue 107

Neil Clarke, Martin L. Shoemaker, J.B. Park, Emily Devenport, Han Song

eBook

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So often in science fiction, robots strive to be human, and are met with fear and loathing, making you wonder why they care to be like us at all. Today I Am Carey paints an idealistic portrait of a family in the near future, framing empathy as the thing that makes human beings unique and worthy of emulation. It’s a work generous in spirit, bursting at the seams with hope, heart, and humanity.

Today I Am Carey is available now.