Read the title again. *nods . Yes, THAT’s how you sell a book, hahahahahhahhahhah. INSTANT curiosity, and then when you add the cover, there is only one thing to say: “If I ever find something like this in the bookstore, I will either have a good laugh because this book will be wacky as fuck (pun intended), or it will be a straight flop”. The great news for you is that , if this book is reviewed here, there is no way in hell this book is the latter.
A bald guy that is a total nerd and momma’s boy, and a hot brunette sex robot with big tits. OH YEAH, a big shoutout to the artist that is Noel Cabrera Fernandez, if you are an author, this is the type of artist you want to work with. Excellent cover.
Ok, onto the meat of the book then! The book starts off weird and cool along with a detailed sales pitch to cut the grass on your groins, just in case you get into a date, which is oddly fitting with what you would expect after you look at the cover, lol.
The best part about this book? It’s verbal chaos blended with absurdity! Everybody is woke, ahahhahahahahahha, they don’t “misgender the deceased” even though it was a woman that died, HAHHAHAHAHAHA, this is hilarious writing right here, like, how far do you have to go, to not … wait…. on another thought… we have reached this stage already, haven’t we?
Terms like “Birthing-Parent” instead of mother, people are non-binary on their official documents, misgendering being a crime, people hiding their genders, “fat phobic”, “priviledge scores” and all of that. It’s crazy. And yes, that’s the whole point of the book, to bring all of this insanity to the forefront of the reader, by making contrasts, and the fact that the author chose and ill-equiped person to be the main character to show how non-mentally ill people are in the face of all this nonsense is a strike of brilliance.
Imagine NAZI-style wokeness, like Nazi-government style and then add wokeness to it as standard modus operandi. Got that? Yes, and now add wokeness as the language of society. Hang on, there’s more, and now put all of that against “cis” white males. Now add 90’s style comedy to all of that. Yeah, that is a very good picture of how absurd this book is.
The more the book goes, the better and funnier it gets, and of course, yes, this is a satire coated in absurdity (just imagine having a sex-bot named “Cherry Pie” that cannot perform her duties), but also because the author uses this satire as a way to sneak warnings and facts of reality in the middle, realities that we as a collective are failling to keep obvious by assuming everybody knows.
Then there are the deeper layers of the book where the author creates a not-unrealisitc at all sceneario where there are cancellation camps and those who speak what’s not approved, go there to repent and be punished for an unknown ammount of years, and somehow that links to our main character and a forming rebellion against the system, that is slowly beginning to crack.
You see, the author does a great job when it comes to showing the progress of things when it comes to fighting wokeness online and the consequences of it.
Not only that but creates a ultra-realistic (and yet absurd) set of internet interactions of people infected by wokeness. The rudeness, the ignorance, the group think, the labelling and the retarded brain-dead logic that everyone that I don’t agree with is a bigot, racist, colonial, nazi, opressor, rapist piece of shit, no matter if they were alive 10 or 1000 years ago. They just want to cancel and judge everyone for no reason at all. Which is not very far from the current reality.
Ok, look, we have to tell you this: the book is very accurate when it comes to how people behave and it’s a satire/comedy novella about wokeness and how to fight it, and there is a sex-bot, but, the resemblances of reality end there, specially when it comes to the “romance” and interactions between the sexes of the main character. In other words, remember, this is just a fictional book.
The book evolves as it goes and it becomes more of a thriller when the fact that the government starts chasing our main character everywhere, bullets start flying around and very slow electric cars chases (because they also banned gasoline by cancelling it) in order to take him down, while also retaining a bit of the absurdity (and titty flashes) here and there.
It’s a nice change of pace, because you will see that if the author kept only the absurdity and fun on the book, he would not be able to pull many of the events and plot twists that he did.
Imagine this: You have the chance to betray your own cause, and principals in order to have it all, to have everything you could ever dream of without consequence. Would you take it? Would you say yes? The main character is faced with this dilemma twice in the book, and the second time, you may think that the best thing would be to say yes and just become the greatest of them all, but, you will see that it’s not so easy as it seems.
This book is very cool, and it not only gives you a solid blueprint to deal with wokeness using time as your ally, but also it shows how woke people think and the consequences of having this type of behaviour in society, this think called “groupthink”.
If you like conspiracy teories, and books that will open your mind on many subjects while making you laugh, this is a solid choice, and we hope that the author makes this a series because there’s still a lot to explore in this semi-erotic dystopian comedy that is “Chester and the Sex-Bot VS The Woke Mind Virus”.
Pros:
- Good narrative, consistent and humorous
- The lightly erotic themes are nice and add to the experience. It’s nothing “smut”
- Excellent thinking point and arguments that will leave you asking if the villain is really the villain, and if the “hero” isn’t just a naive adult-kid with lots of luck and dumb determination
- Great characters that fit archetypes of their roles and behave accoudingly
- Good plot and nice plot twists, specially at the end
- A good first book for a potentially good series if the author decides to continue and push this to either the dystopian or sci-fi genre
Cons:
- It’s a feature, not a bug, but in our view, the main character could’ve had fucked the bot once or twice, but we understand that he is… “untrained” for that type of stuff.


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