![]() ![]() ![]() Love, the robot finally learns, can be many different things-and sometimes it’s closer to home than one realizes. Characteristic illustrations by Sima ( Not Quite Narwhal) playfully juxtapose friendly, angular robot characters with sunny meadows and cozy residences. A friendly baker shares her definition of love, and children on a playground have their own ideas: “Love is lawn gnomes!” and “Love is wishing on a star!” The varying definitions don’t add up for Z, who worries about understanding love’s meaning. ![]() With a paper hat atop its head and a bindle over one shoulder, Z journeys via cat-helmed boat through a narrow waterway, meeting a beaver, a turtle, and a crow feeding its chicks: “Love is sharing your food, even when it’s delicious,” the crow says. In Simas version of a crossover episode, Nimbus, the titular pegasus-who has purply blue wings and an aviators cap to match-meets Kelp, the unicorn protagonist of 2017s Not Quite Narwhal. ![]() Z, a robot with a boxy head, pincer arms, and kind, yellow eyes, discovers a message in a bottle that’s “too smudgy to read,” but ends, “Love, Beatrice.” The robot seeks out the meaning of the two words, but the robots in its family cannot compute its meaning. ![]()
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