If you like science fiction/ fantasy with a liberal dose of weird, this is a book for you.
I enjoyed the characters (nicely quirky), and the world building was fantastic. Most overtly, the story serves as a metaphor for what happens when we sacrifice our humanity to efficiency, law, and I’ll-defined “progress.” Additional themes include the making (and breaking) of society’s roles, how we deal with failure, and the nature of love.
There is some body horror here (of the machine-human merger variety), but I was able to dial back my imagination when it got to be too much.
The first chapter serves a necessary plot purpose, but stylistically it was perhaps my least favorite part of the book. If you are dissuaded by the start, stick around for the second chapter before deciding whether to keep reading.
The ending was surprising and satisfying.