An inventive tale by a beloved Hans Christian Andersen Award winner
celebrates our differences--and the joys of inclusion--through the lens
of artificial intelligence.
From the boundless imagination of David Almond comes a thought-provoking
question, packaged in a lively illustrated chapter book: what if a robot
went to school? When a new boy joins their class, everyone thinks he's .
. . odd. George doesn't behave like other kids. He doesn't think like
other kids. But he's great at football and snacking, and that's what
matters to Dan and Maxie and friends, who resolve to make George feel
welcome. Over time, they learn that he's just like them, in most ways,
except one: George is a robot, part of an ambitious new experiment, with
sinister people bent on destroying him. When his lab pulls him out of
school, can George's new friends recover him--and set him free? Told in
David Almond's signature rollicking narrative style, this poignant tale
about what it means to be human, paired with warm and funny
black-and-white illustrations, will inspire children to think and giggle
in equal measure.