Member Reviews

TJ Klune will always get my attention when he has a new release. House on the Cerulean Sea was such a special read, it has been hard to go in to this book not expecting something similar.
This is a sort of retelling of Pinocchio , with other inspirations mixed in. It is enjoyable, though not the vibe I was expecting, more sci fi than fantasy.
Still a lovey read, TJ Klune always manages to pull something special out the bag.

Was this review helpful?

Victor lives with his inventor dad, Gio, in the forest, with only his robots Nurse Ratched and Rambo to keep him company. One day, when foraging for scraps, he stumbles across an android. After restoring it, he discovers that it has a history with his dad. Even worse, this leads to the capture of his dad by the Authority. Victor and his friends must go on a quest to bring his dad back.

What I liked: just like the other TJ Klune books I've read, the characters here are great. I especially loved Rambo and Nurse Ratched.

What I didn't like: it took so long to get to the journey. It was probably about 40% through before they really started on their quest. Once it got going to that part, the writing wasn't what I've enjoyed from this author in the past. I wish there had been more shenanigans along the road.

Overall, it was fine, but I missed the magic of The House on the Cerulean Sea.

I received my copy from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

📚📚📚📚/5

✨Big thank you to NetGalley for the advanced E-ARC in exchange for an honest review✨

Science fiction post human world, an inventor and father of death, and the last human on earth. Tj Klune has really done a beautiful job with a retelling of the heart warming story of Pinocchio.

Victor Lawson goes on a grand adventure of self discovery with his cynical nurse robot, his anxiety ridden vacuum bot, and a machine that is programmed to kill him. He must travel to a far away city where he is unwelcome to try and save the life, genius, and memories of his father

This truly is a beautiful little story of sense of self, love and loss, and the ride and fall of man. This was my first read of TJ Klune and I’m very much looking forward to more!

Was this review helpful?

2.75

Unfortunately this one was not my favourite and I'm so sad! This was my most anticipated release.

Part of it was that I definitely had the wrong expectations: I was expecting a fantasy/magical realism book but this was definitely a sci-fi romance. I had a hard time getting into it, it started in a different way than the sort of beginning I've got used to getting and it really set the tone for me. Also, I think the dialogues were taken a bit too far in their silliness and crudeness. Don't get me wrong, I've read (and loved) other books from this author and I see his different style of writing/intensity, but this book was sold to be similar to House in the Cerulean Sea and Under the Whispering Door and I don't think the tone was the same (it felt more similar to his YA series and honestly a bit cringe).

Apart from my expectations being completely off, I also think the plot was not very strong. It didn't achieve the depth and profoundness it took on imo. One thing that bothered me was how much the machines were made to be evil and humans the saviors, when the humans had created the whole chaos by treating machines so poorly that they decided to rebel to the extreme. I was bored for most of it, I almost DNFed, but then Vic found Hap. I thought I was finally connecting, but in the end it wasn't enough.

That being said there were some beautiful moments and I'm glad I got to read another of this author's works. For the right reader, this will be magical and you'll feel giddy reading this story as TJ Klune so often can make you feel.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you NetGalley and TorBooks for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Victor Lawson's life has always been in the forest and knowing he was different from his family. His best friends are Nurse Ratched the robotic physician's assistant, Rambo the anxious hopeless romantic vacuum, and his Android Father Giovanni Lawson. Like his father, Victor is an inventor and caring soul who believes that everyone deserves a second chance. It is as he is searching the nearby scrap yards that he comes across a decommissioned android who will come to be know as Hap. Victor brings Hap home and fixes him. Creating a heart of metal and wood to replace Hap's battery. This proves to topple the dominos of Victor's peaceful existence. Setting them all on an adventure that will answer where Victor came from and what it truly means to be a human with free will.

All at once in this stand alone novel T.J Klune mixes a retelling of Pinocchio with Asimov's Caves of Steel, and just a nod to Mary Shelly's Frankenstein. When I began to notice these little details I was very impressed and excited about the influences. Klune gives us yet another version of the found family set against the back drop of a world that at once feels like a future we could be eerily headed towards. One thing that I appreciated however, was that Klune didn't linger too long on this world until it was necessary to thrust both us and the main character into it. At the start, until a happen chance mention of "Ory-gon" to tell us we're in the Pacific Northwest, the area that we find ourselves in feels very insubstantial. The over all world of the story was almost a blank canvas. However, I found myself liking this as it became clear that the focus of the story was the characters and their relationships. The concept an exploration of love and friendships.

I so wanted to love this book. I was a huge fan of Klune's House in the Cerulean Sea and I think going into this novel expecting the exact same type of story did me a disservice. While there are elements familiar to this previous book, this one does stand on its own. I know there will be folks who love this book, but I am just not one of them. I think Klune has some amazing themes in this one and he plays with a lot, but so much of the style was not to my taste

This one had probably the weakest and strongest characters at the same time. However, this balance did not sit on the characters that you expected them to. I wanted to love Victor as a hero, but he was so incredibly bland to me. And with the details that we're given about his views on life, his struggles to learn to speak or express emotion, his asexuality and what that means to him, and the robotic talent you would not expect this to be the case. Sadly, it feels as though we have the blueprints and no completed project. For most of this story I found myself wondering if this was supposed to be Victor and Hap's story or Nurse Ratched and Rambo's. These two characters are there to show us what Victor is capable of, provide comic relief, and tethers for this strange group. And they do...almost constantly. What could've been a great detail often overtook the rest of the story.

They also became the vehicle for so many jokes and conversations that revolved around genitalia and pooping. It was done as a comical way to show how robots don't understand different human aspects, but it was overly done to being childish. Perhaps this was the intent, but I found myself rolling my eyes so many times. I almost wanted to count how many times "evacute his bowels" was said. Call me a prude I guess.

I wanted to root for the romance. It was M/M and with the asexuality I was excited to see that brought to this narrative and for the representation. However, is just wasn't there. I found nothing to convince myself that they were truly in love. However, perhaps that is my own ignorance as someone who is not asexual. This could be my own limitation and not on the author.

Ultimately, the story and discussion overall were enough to keep me engaged. Towards the latter half of the novel I do feel like Klune found a better balance between his characters and that made it an enjoyable read. I would definitely recommend the folks give this one a try for the concepts and I hope they are less bothered by some of the other details than I was.

Was this review helpful?

I absolutely love books by T.J. Klune! He writes complex characters who are easy to care about. The settings for each story are unique and so much fun to visualize.

In his newest novel, In the Lives of Puppets, a boy named Victor lives in the woods with his android father, Giovanni, and two robots named Rambo and Nurse Ratched. Shortly after Victor brings a new android to life (Hap), Gio is taken and Victor goes on a quest with his non-human friends to rescue him.

This story is a loose retelling of Pinocchio. It delves into the philosophical theme or what makes something real. It is a story of family, love, hope, loneliness, despair, adventure, friendship, and freedom. This novel covers a lot and requires time to process and reflect to truly appreciate all that it is.

While I appreciate books that support the wide range in human sexuality, my only criticism of this novel is that there were too many sex jokes and references to sex. A few added humor to the story, but the remainder were unnecessary, in my opinion, as they only detracted from the flow of the book.

I am very grateful to #NetGalley #Tor#MacmillanPublishingGroup for an digital ARC of #IntheLivesofPuppets by #TJKlune in exchange for an honest review. - 4 stars

Was this review helpful?

I feel like five stars aren’t enough to give this book. Not only is The Lives of Puppets a beautiful and emotional tale of love and forgiveness, but it’s warm and funny and amazing.

Imagine Wall-E, but with robots that all talk, and that are all quirky in their own ways, and that have adorable and hysterical adult humor. There is the sociopathic Nurse Ratched who has only a slightly better bedside manner than her namesake and an adorable vacuum robot, Rambo, who is adorable naive and enthusiastic. Victor is a human, surrounded by robots who have become his family, and like any other family they are dysfunctional and also beautiful together.

I’ve never stopped recommending TJ Klune’s books to anybody who would listen, and this book has somehow ended up being my favorite of them all. I can’t give high enough praise to this gorgeous story!

Thank you so much to Tor Books for providing me with an ARC of this book.

Was this review helpful?

In the Lives of Puppets is a beautiful story! Losely based on Pinocchio, Klune created a unique world and characters. I absolutely love the main group of characters. The banter between them hilarious!!! I enjoyed this book so much! I wish it wasn't over!

Was this review helpful?

Thank you NetGalley and Tor for the ARC! In this heartachingly beautiful book, we follow Victor Lawson, a human, and his journeys with his quircky robotic family: his father, Gio, Nurse Ratched, and Rambo. During a journey to the scrap yard Victor discovers Hap an android with a dark past and accidently wounds himself, leaving a single drop of blood behind. He then works vigorously to restore Hap and soon Hap becomes another member of the family. And then the robots come and take Gio away. Victor knows it's not safe, but he sets out with Nurse Ratched, Rambo, and Hap to get him back. Fans of TJ Klune should love this emotional tale of found family and what it means to be human.

Was this review helpful?

This is a treasure of a book. I'm not a sci-fi reader at all, but I am a big fan of Klune's writing and characters, and that definitely won me over in this book. It's got all the coziness, wit and empathy that I love, with the addition of robots. Robots with overwhelming humanity in a world where humans no longer exist. It's a bittersweet reflection on forgiveness and growth, and a warning about AI.

I appreciate the asexual rep, however it almost felt a bit convenient as Vic is the only human around. But again, it was nice to see, just wish it was explored a bit more.

Thanks to NetGalley and Tor for access to this ARC.

Was this review helpful?

“𝐈𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐋𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐏𝐮𝐩𝐩𝐞𝐭𝐬” 𝐫𝐞𝐯𝐢𝐞𝐰

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

A queer retelling of The Adventures of Pinocchio mixed with sci-fi, this book was yet another heart-warmer from Klune.

Giovanni Lawson is an android inventor, living in the forest with his human son, Victor, and two salvaged machines Rambo and Nurse Ratched. When Victor discovers a damaged android and salvages it, he discovers it shares a dark past with Giovanni that threatens to destroy the quiet life they have built hidden away in the trees.

Nobody writes witty like TJ Klune. I love his writing style and the characters he creates, there’s just something so comforting about his storytelling to me. I came to this story because of Klune but stayed for Rambo and Nurse Ratched. The banter and quirky one liners I’ve come to expect from Klune’s writing did not disappoint, and this was a fun new theme from him that I adored. I personally am not into sci-fi books on the whole, but this one was so unique and original I recommend it even if you’re not the biggest sci-fi buff either! The story was a lot longer than I think it maybe needed to be, but that’s really my only complaint!

Thank you so much to NetGalley and tor for my arc, all thoughts and opinions are completely my own.

𝐈𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐋𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐏𝐮𝐩𝐩𝐞𝐭𝐬 will be released 4.25.2023!

Was this review helpful?

Thanks so much to NetGalley for the chance to read an ARC of one of my most anticipated releases of 2023!

TJ Klune is a master of his craft, forming beautiful and (simultaneously) heart wrenching/warming stories that teach important lessons while transporting you to beautiful worlds of magic. I know going into any of his books I’m going to experience a roller coaster of emotions and leave feeling empty but fulfilled and better off as a person for knowing the story.

In the Lives of Puppets explores what it means to be human with a cast of mostly robots and following (loosely) a well known and loved story as a foundation: Pinnochio. We follow Vic, Nurse Ratched, Rambo, and Hap on an adventure to save Gio (Vic’s father), their family, and so much more along the way. Klune tackles topics like grief, love, family, identity, individuality, belonging….using robots and a children’s story - again, he’s a master.

I could honestly talk about this (and any TJ Klune book) for hours. He transports you to worlds not so unlike our own while weaving in enough fantasy to feel safely distanced from reality and simultaneously discussing (sometimes difficult) topics necessary for our actual existence.

I loved this book - I can’t say it’s my favorite by Klune, but I loved it. I’ll be adding it to the shelf of “everyone in my life should read this” and I think you should all check it out too!

Was this review helpful?

Vic, human tinkerer, has rescued and fixed his friends—Rambo, an anxious vacuum bot, and the sociopathic Nurse Ratched. Giovanni, Vic’s father, is an android and a brilliant creator, but he does not like Vic’s habit of sneaking through the Scrap Yards. When Vic finds and fixes a decommissioned android, Hap, a dark past is revealed and the forest can no longer protect them…

This story was very entertaining—bizarre in the best way and full of playful banter—but it was a little slow until around the 20-25% mark when we start to get to know Hap.

As Vic and his friends head out into the world and have a handful of brief philosophical conversations, you can’t help but reflect on humanity—love, joy, forgiveness, strengths, flaws, and mortality.

Once they got closer to the City of Electric Dreams, I couldn’t stop reading.

A delightful adventure with a heartwarming ending.

Thanks to NetGalley and TorBooks for the ARC.

Was this review helpful?

The blurb explains the premise of this Pinocchio-inspired book pretty clearly: a human (Victor) and three robots form an atypical family living deep in the forest. Their life is changed when Giovanni’s (Victor’s android father) past building human-hunting killing machines comes back to haunt them, and Giovanni is taken to be decommissioned or reprogrammed. Victor and the remaining robot members of his strange but loving little family are off to rescue him.

This premise intrigued me. Along with having wanted to give TJ Klune a try, this was an easy book for me to want to pick up.

It would have made it even *easier* if they had published an alternate, shorter blurb for this book, something like “the story of a boy and his three robot buddies, GLaDOS, Claptrap, and the Terminator.”

The main story of this book didn’t *quite* click for me. It was fine, Victor as a character was fine, the emotional resonance was fine. I don’t have any complaints about it, but it’s also not something I’m going to be thinking about for a long time. It felt a little like the literary version of an Oscar-bait film, if I’m being completely honest. A bit pretentious, and full of Very Important Symbolism and saying Serious Things.

But oh dear lord, Victor’s three robot friends. This book was *hilarious*. If you’re familiar with the Borderlands and Portal video game series, then you can no doubt imagine what it would be like if GLaDOS had to deal with Claptrap, and it is AMAZING. Throw in the T-800, and this book never stopped being funny.

Was this review helpful?

I cannot say how much I appreciate the opportunity given to me to have this book as an ARC! I loved it so much! The amazing world-building and adored every character (which characters can affect my whole reading experience and it was done wonderfully). This book is a masterpiece

Was this review helpful?

Went in completely blind and it was my first Klune book! The genre was also new to me but there was so much to love. It is a retelling or Pinocchio in a post apocalyptic world where Gio, a robot, has escaped the city and built a home and family in the forest. His family is composed of an anxious vacuum, a hilarious Nurse Ratched, and a human boy. Eventually, city officials discover Gio’s hidden location and force him back to the city. This begins the adventurous part of the story when his family seeks to rescue him. The book was full of humor, deep feelings, adventures, and an exploration or romance. I really enjoyed it and will have to work on Klune’s backlist since others have shared this book doesn’t to his greatest hits!

Was this review helpful?

A SF retelling of Pinocchio with a lot of heart. A story about forgiveness and choice. Maybe my favorite Klune so far--for fans of Psalm of the Wild-Built.

Was this review helpful?

TJ Klune's latest book is a reimagining of Pinocchio and it is filled with all the heartwarming charm of his last two novels, The House in the Cerulean Sea and Under the Whispering Door. His characters are always so well-constructed and endearing. When science fiction is done right, we learn more about what it really means to be human through the eyes of non-humans (see Spock and Data for obvious examples). This book does that and really touched my soul. There is heartbreak and sadness but also love and humor. I highly recommend this book to anyone. Thanks for Netgalley and Tor Books for an ARC of this book. All thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.

Was this review helpful?

A life changing retelling of The Adventures of Pinocchio. Although, I didn't love this one quite has much as T.J. Klune's other books It was still a very enjoyable read. I love the familiarity I feel with his books and the cozy vibes that ensue afterwards. As always there were many laughs and tears along the way. I found all of the characters to be lovable. Nurse Ratched was my absolute favorite, her character was incredibly funny and loving. The asexual representation was also like a breath of fresh air, it is not often I find it so eloquently written within a book. ITLOP was a lot more adventurous than the authors past books, which I thoroughly enjoyed. There were parts of the book that felt a bit dragged out and slow, especially the journey to the city. A heartwarming story of love, loss, and change.

Was this review helpful?

You can expect certain trademarks when it comes to TJ Klune books: a fantastical setting, quirky cast of characters, found family, dark humor, light exploration of deeper themes, and just a teaspoon of romance. In The Lives of Puppets is no different.

I would describe this one as Wall-e meets the Matrix, meets…Oz?” 😂. I can’t say much without giving things away, but it has a much more dystopian theme than Klune’s other books.

I absolutely adored Rambo and Nurse Ratched. They made the whole book for me with their banter and loveable personalities. I personally did have one story continuity issue and didn’t feel like the ending left any openings for a possibility of a future for out friends. There was a moment when I started skimming descriptions to get back to the action. For those reasons, I’m giving this one ⭐️⭐️⭐️- it was a enjoyable, but I didn’t love it and probably wouldn’t read again. This is on par for me for TJ Klune’s books though, so I think it’s safe to say that if you love his others, you’ll love this one too!

Was this review helpful?