The Mad Scientist’s Daughter

Mad Scientist's Daughter

The Mad Scientist’s Daughter by Cassandra Rose Clarke

Genre: Science-fiction, Romance, Adult

Expected Publication: February 7th 2013 by Angry Robot

The Plot.

“Cat, this is Finn. He’s going to be your tutor.”

He looks, and acts human, though he has no desire to be. He was programmed to assist his owners, and performs his duties to perfection. A billion-dollar construct, his primary task now is to tutor Cat. As she grows into a beautiful young woman, Finn is her guardian, her constant companion… and more.

But when the government grants rights to the ever-increasing robot population, however, Finn struggles to find his place in the world.

The Review.

The Mad Scientist’s Daughter is a novel that moved me to tears. I truly did not expect to feel so emotional about a robot. I mean a robot to me has always been metal pieces controlled with complicated electronic circuits inside and sometimes, occasionally the robot may have a system that allows responses. However, Finn is a robot like no other. He was human, he felt human to me and ultimately I couldn’t displace him as not being human and this humanity that surrounded Finn made his story all the more heart-breaking because whilst our protagonist is following Cat growing up from a very young age to her later years which works surprisingly well across the novel, I felt that there was a strong focus through the novel on Finn and that viewing the world through his eyes would have really changed the workings of the novel because I would love to get into his mind and delve further because he has a complex character that is still hard to pinpoint by the end of the novel. I am frankly enamoured with Finn and this is probably why I sobbed quite a lot when reading The Mad Scientist’s Daughter.

“His eyes loomed steadily in the buzzing light of the porch. His skin was much too fair, sallow beneath the swath of black hair that flopped across his forehead.”

Don’t get me wrong, this novel is far from being faultless, but I did really enjoy the novel. The Mad Scientist’s Daughter is a gritty novel that whilst it delves into the world of science-fiction, it touches on friendship, relationships, loss, grief and a changing world. It isn’t full of flowers and happiness, Clarke shows her versatility as an author as she takes on loss of close family relations, abusive relationships and coming to terms with your feelings for others and the meanings that truly lay behind these. I think the cover perfectly encapsulates the kind of desolation that The Mad Scientist’s Daughter delves into and the moon that becomes a very vital part of the story. If you are looking for a happy novel, then The Mad Scientist’s Daughter is not it and I suggest you run far away. However if you want something that’s gritty, emotional and an all around rollercoaster, but still manages to end of a moment of hope and love then pick up The Mad Scientist’s Daughter because I don’t see how it cannot fail to wow.

Cat is the protagonist of this tale and she’s a very complex character. Her relationship with her parents is rather turbulent, but I am thankful to say they are not absent. They show concern for her and whilst they aren’t always present they genuinely care for her welfare and their actions dictate that they only endeavour to give her the best with pushing her. Despite all of this, Cat is not a happy character and she comes with her fair share of her problems. Personally, her isolation as a child with only her robot tutor, Finn, for company and then her friendship group of rather unstable, gothic junkies through high-school lead me to say that this clearly influences Cat’s rather wild behaviour. She’s not an easy character to get along with and whilst I can’t say I liked her, I could connect with her and I found her issues and feelings moving and turbulent. She clearly felt conflicted throughout the novel about Finn and what he can actually be to her, after all, he is a robot and she can’t fathom his nature. It’s rather sad their relationship and the pushing and pulling that takes place and it’s always one of my favourite aspects of a romance to see a rocky path to love and these two take a real roller-coaster. Cat through the end of it, manages to stick to her beliefs after being a very flighty and indecisive character throughout particularly when she lost herself. I did like that she seemed to have matured and found a semblance of who she truly was by the end of the novel and this allowed me to like her more by the end.

“You’re welcome.” He regarded her with his dark eyes. Cat crawled forward on her bed and reached across the chasm between them to pull the chair, with him in it, closer to her.”

The one thing that I didn’t like about The Mad Scientist’s Daughter is that we had very little background to the state of the world and what had happened. Clare seemed to skip straight  over this and I was always hoping that we get some idea of what this “destruction” was and the extremes temperatures they had which all led to the robots being brought in to rebuild the world. I felt we had a great lack of world building for the past and this was Clare just seemed to drop. Everything else about the novel excelled because it was so character driven with fantastic, primary and secondary characters, but the history of the world seemed to vanish. For me, with this, Clare’s novel would be in a whole other league, but nevertheless I still enjoyed it immensely.

Finn is a robot and that will not change no matter how much humanity you apply to him and this was an interesting concept to deal with. I can see how this may make some people uncomfortable in reading because of that, but if you look at the perspective of his behaviour and his feelings then he’s not just a hunk of metal. You need to push aside him as a robot, and look at the romance and Finn as a person because he can be moving and he raised emotions in me. He was a character I grew to respect and love and he’s the reason I kept crying. If it were not for Finn, I do not think The Mad Scientist’s Daughter would be quite the same and I’m afraid my favourite Star Wars robot, C-3PO has been replaced by a new one who’s after my heart. Clare clearly excelled with Finn’s character and I think she worked wonders on the angle of the robot. She also followed this up with protests and underground groups working to gain rights for robots and the changing environment of the world meant that robots were being accepted and I liked the political aspect of the novel and Finn’s character because he was clearly entangled with these elements.

“I can’t tell you what it means to be the only one of my kind,” he said. “I can’t… There is a lack in myself. But your thesis almost filled it in. It was… a start.”

Clare does a fantastic job of building up secondary characters and relationships outside of Finn and Cat because the novel does focus on their relationship it does not solely revolve around it. Clare builds a world up around Cat, so we can only see the world and the people that she connects with. Outside of this we are blank, but because Cat seems to run into lots of people it actually works surprisingly well because we don’t feel confined to just a few characters. The strongest characters I feel are Cat’s parents and in particular her father who plays the strongest secondary character in the novel, but this is probably important because he is the “Mad Scientist”. I didn’t think this aspect of the novel was played on strongly enough about him being the “Mad Scientist” because whilst Cat dealt with issues from other teenagers it was never truly explored. The meaning of this name is implied, but it’s never stated obviously and I think Clare could have explored it a lot further to a greater advantage of her novel.

Through The Mad Scientist’s Daughter Clare presents her versatility of an author to broach both into Young Adult fiction and Adult fiction as you may more commonly know her as the author of The Assassin’s Curse and this novel is incredibly different. I like that the two novels were very different and reflected two entirely different meanings and that she didn’t try to apply the style of The Assassin’s Curse to The Mad Scientist’s Daughter because she made them two entirely different things. If I’m honest, I enjoyed The Mad Scientist’s Daughter more because I thought it was more developed in meaning, but that The Assassin’s Curse has the stronger world foundations. Either way I recommend both novels without reserve, but suggest if you prefer young-adult that you stick to Clare’s The Assassin’s Curse.

Overall, whilst I can nit-pick at The Mad Scientist’s Daughter and I do not see it as a perfect novel, it is one that I could connect and enjoy despite my emotional outbursts and this is what makes it one of my favourite releases of the year so far. Perfection does not always equate to enjoyment in my opinion, so I think despite the few points of contention that you may have with The Mad Scientist’s Daughter or people’s queasy reaction over Finn as a robot, you shouldn’t disregard this novel because it is definitely a stunner in the making. There are lots of brilliant elements that The Mad Scientist’s Daughter manages to encapsulate with the emotion, the characterisation, the politics and the pacing that whilst this novel pushes being quite lengthy keeps it moving and kept me reading. I’ll be looking out for more works from Clare because she’s an author to watch out for.

*quotes taken from an uncorrected arc e-copy provided by Angry Robot via NetGalley.

5 books 

 

20 Comments

Filed under 2013 Publication, 5 Books, Adult, Angry-Robot, Cassandra Rose Clarke, E-book, Romance, Science-Fiction

20 responses to “The Mad Scientist’s Daughter

  1. I think I’m beginning to develop a yearning to test more books from the sci-fi genre, which has always been something I have steered clear of save for some exceptions. This sounds rather interesting, though — I plan to keep an eye out for it, and hopefully my library will order it!

    • Livvy @Nerdy Book Reviews

      Yes, I’ve found myself broaching into more sci-fi. This one is a lighter sci-fi that I think should lead everyone in gently before you really get hit with the proper hard core sci-fi.
      Hope you enjoy if you do give it a shot! 🙂

  2. I love that we both reviewed this today. I agree with you about Clarke’s skill and Finn’y character, but I’m afraid this whole thing was just a bit too angsty for my taste, and there were times when I wished Cat would get hit by a car or something. This is a book defintiely worth reading, but had I known the level of angst in advance, i doubt I would have picked it up. There was one thing in the end that Clarke chose not to address that bothered me immensely. I can’t say what it is because I don’t want to spoil it for anyone, but I’ll try to be vague: not telling someone about someone else just didn’t seem right, regardless of their history.
    GReat review!

    • Livvy @Nerdy Book Reviews

      It was certainly angst filled which made me cry a lot and want to put it down, but I kept driving on and I’m so glad I read it.
      Yes, I think I get what you mean. It didn’t seem right either. I have to agree, but it’s human nature in these things.
      Thank you! 🙂

  3. This book just about zapped my brain to death. I completely agree that it would have been really cool to get a snapshot into Finn’s mind but then even if the whole book had only been dialogue, you could still feel his confusion and pain. Ugh, such fantastic writing skills from Cassandra and such a brilliant review, Livvy! 😀

  4. I’ve heard such great things about this title! Can’t wait to read it! Great review! 😀

  5. Oh I think I adored this book as much as you did Livvy, Clare wowed me with her debut novel so I just knew I had to pick this up straight away. I had some issues with Cat during the middle of the novel, but like you I enjoyed how her character developed in the end! Brilliant review Livvy! 🙂

    • Livvy @Nerdy Book Reviews

      Ahh, I’m glad somebody did! Yes, I really enjoyed her debut and I was more excited for the direction of this one.
      I get exactly what you mean, but overall I loved the novel. Thank you! 🙂

  6. I liked the Assassin’s Curse so I keep thinking I want to pick this one up! Great review, has me convinced!

  7. Wow! I’m so glad you enjoyed this so much, Olivia. I think if readers can appreciate and enjoy Cat, it’ll be a definite hit, but unfortunately, it didn’t work out for me. I am still really looking forward to The Pirate’s Wish, though, so I have hope for Clarke’s future novels still! 🙂 Fantastic review, dear!

    • Livvy @Nerdy Book Reviews

      I am sad to hear you didn’t enjoy it as much as me, but I can see why you didn’t. I am definitely looking out for that too. Thank you! 🙂

  8. Sounds very interesting! I like the concept about the robot.

  9. Excellent review Livvy. I always liked Data from Star Trek, so I’m sure I’ll love Fiinn. 🙂

  10. Oh this sounds really intriguing!! I’m not usually one for tear-jerkers, but they certainly have their place, such as, ‘Never Let Me Go’ by Kazuo Ishiguro. I read and watched the film and managed to bawl my eyes out for all of it, I was left thinking about it for days!! 😀

    • Livvy @Nerdy Book Reviews

      Ahh I haven’t heard of that book… They do have their places and this one is a great read! 🙂 Ahhh, well this book certainly made an impact.

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