Máquinas como yo

Paperback, 360 pages

Published Oct. 31, 2019 by Editorial Anagrama.

ISBN:
978-84-339-8046-5
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3 stars (2 reviews)

Machines Like Me is the 15th novel by the English author Ian McEwan. The novel published in 2019 by Jonathan Cape.

The novel is set in the 1980s in an alternative history timeline in which the UK lost the Falklands War, Alan Turing is still alive, and the Internet, social media, and self-driving cars already exist. The story revolves around an android named Adam and its/his relationship with its/his owners, Charlie and Miranda, which involves the formation of a love triangle.

11 editions

Review of 'Machines Like Me' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

This book was a mandatory read for a course I’m following, the main reason being the relationship between the humans and the AI, Adam. As someone who is actively studying the human relationship to technology, it was quite interesting to see the dynamic between Charlie, Miranda and Adam develop. I wish I would have bet money on how it would end though. Spoiler: the same way as every other fiction about this topic. Sympathy for the AI. All the political context seemed to be no more than a distraction from the predictability of the story. Why two stars? Because somehow I was still curious to see how little Mark would end up and how Miranda’s court case would turn out. It passed my time. Otherwise, pretty unnecessary book.

Review of 'Machines Like Me' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

What an evocative work. So different and distant from me, yet some of the overtones stick. To be despised by a man you admire. To have your life torn apart by truth and forthright honesty. To harm, to forgive, and yet to be trapped in a seemingly perpetual state of being damaging to oneself ... all these things rise from the pages here, shining brilliantly and brightly through the lens of a Britain and a technology we've yet to master.

Or perhaps it's just that I finished reading this novel before sunrise, tossed around emotionally without the surcease of sleep to cloak and protect my thoughts.
However deep you care to go, there's something in here to catch the eye and stir the senses. A moving, intrusive novel, with a gentle, almost uncharacteristically diffident feel to its messages with a seemingly disproportionately potent ability to hold me captive and induce …