The Lost Robot

Joe Todd-Stanton

Publisher: Flying Eye Books
Publication Date: 05/03/2026 ISBN: 9781838741358 Category:
Hardback

£12.99

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Description

Deep in the heart of a rubbish dump, a little broken robot woke up . . .

Mio can’t remember where they came from or how long it’s been, but they know they’re not meant to be there. They go in search of their memories and the home they once knew, only to discover that everything has changed.

A stunning picture book with a beautiful message about loving yourself and knowing there is always a place where you belong.

Publisher Review

A joyful remedy for our times – an uplifting eco-fable of repair, renewal, and second chances. * Mikey Please, The Cafe at the Edge of the Woods * Captivatingly beautiful, The Lost Robot is also an achingly poignant mediation on our wasteful society, and touches on themes of found family and belonging. — Charlotte Eyre * The Bookseller, ’10 Titles Not to Miss in March’ * A battered humanoid robot wakes up amid a vast, rust-colored wasteland of rubbish and discarded technology in this heavily Toy Story- and WALL-E-inflected picture book by Todd-Stanton (The Comet). To determine how it arrived there, the robot enters an adjacent futuristic city, triggering a series of memories. The white figure recalls once being gifted to a pale-skinned, dark-haired human child-multiple frames show their joyful days together-and even finds the family before realizing that it’s been replaced with a newer model. Heartbroken, the damaged robot resigns itself to the rubbish heap, but two pale-skinned human scavengers-a mother who wears an eye patch and her daughter-rescue it, whisking the protagonist to their decidedly unfuturistic home in an idyllic mountain valley. They lovingly rejuvenate the robot, using a melange of jubilant hues and helping it to understand that “even the most broken things can always be saved.” Themes of consumerism, obsolescence, and redemption are grounded in genuine emotion throughout this cinematically rendered picture book about finding one’s people and one’s place in the world. Ages 3-5. * Publisher’s Weekly *

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