Roderick at Random explained

Roderick at Random is a novel by John Sladek published in 1983. It is the sequel to Roderick, or The Education of a Young Machine (1980); both novels were reissued together in 2001 as The Complete Roderick.

Plot summary

Roderick at Random is a novel in which Roderick the robot tries to learn about being human.

Reception

Dave Langford reviewed Roderick at Random for White Dwarf #39, and stated that "The first worthwhile SF to arrive in 1983 is John Sladek's Roderick at Random [...] Sladek's satire is merciless, hilariously pointing out how humans prefer not to think for themselves, programmed by newspapers, tranquillizers, food fads or batty cults becoming much more predictable and less rational than poor Roderick. Sad, but not far from being true."[1]

Dave Pringle reviewed Roderick at Random for Imagine magazine, and stated that "It's a crazy, venal, hilarious world that Sladek creates. while Roderick himself is beautiful, a saint."[2]

Reviews

Notes and References

  1. Langford . Dave . David Langford . Critical Mass . . 39 . 29 . . March 1983 .
  2. Pringle. Dave. David Pringle. Book Review . review . . 3. 36 . TSR Hobbies (UK), Ltd. . June 1983.