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Robot Companion sci-fi books

The machine that becomes a friend.

105 books
Newest firstMost popular
Green City Wars
Green City Wars
Adrian Tchaikovsky
PG-13Adult 18+
Valet
Valet
J.P. Lacrampe
PGAdult 18+
Ode to the Half-Broken
Ode to the Half-Broken
Suzanne Palmer
PG-13Adult 18+
The Second Life of Snap
The Second Life of Snap
Erin Entrada Kelly
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The Ones We Choose: A Story About a Robot Named B-01
The Ones We Choose: A Story About a Robot Named B-01
Brock Morgan
GChildren 5-8
The Wild Robot on the Island
The Wild Robot on the Island
Peter Brown
GChildren 5-8
How to Raise Your Robot: How to Put Your Robot to Sleep
How to Raise Your Robot: How to Put Your Robot to Sleep
C. T. Moody
GChildren 5-8
The Wild Robot Protects (Volume 3)
The Wild Robot Protects (Volume 3)
Peter Brown
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Monk and Robot
Monk and Robot
Becky Chambers
PGAdult 18+
The Prisoner and the Pirate (Turrim Archive)
The Prisoner and the Pirate (Turrim Archive)
Jenelle Leanne Schmidt
PG-13YA 12-17
Super Rabbit Boy vs. the Gigabot!: A Branches Book
Super Rabbit Boy vs. the Gigabot!: A Branches Book
Thomas Flintham
GChildren 5-8
Ghosts
Ghosts
Joshua Dalzelle
PG-13Adult 18+
Alphabot Adventures: A Robot ABC Book (ABC Books for Kids Ages 3-5)
Alphabot Adventures: A Robot ABC Book (ABC Books for Kids Ages 3-5)
Lauren Briére
GChildren 5-8
The Quiet One
The Quiet One
Yiting Lee
GChildren 5-8
Oasis
Oasis
Guojing
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The First Cat in Space and the Wrath of the Paperclip: A Graphic Novel
The First Cat in Space and the Wrath of the Paperclip: A Graphic Novel
Mac Barnett
GChildren 5-8
ARTificial Intelligence
ARTificial Intelligence
David Biedrzycki
GChildren 5-8
Norby's Other Secret & Norby and the Lost Princess
Norby's Other Secret & Norby and the Lost Princess
Isaac Asimov
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Norby Finds a Villain & Norby Down to Earth
Norby Finds a Villain & Norby Down to Earth
Isaac Asimov
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Hearts of Stone and Steel (Turrim Archive)
Hearts of Stone and Steel (Turrim Archive)
Jenelle Leanne Schmidt
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Sentient Bonds
Sentient Bonds
Alex Timothy
PG-13YA 12-17
The Last Zookeeper
The Last Zookeeper
Aaron Becker
GChildren 5-8
Meltdown!
Meltdown!
David Griswold
GChildren 5-8
Super Rabbit Boy Blasts Off!: A Branches Book
Super Rabbit Boy Blasts Off!: A Branches Book
Thomas Flintham
GChildren 5-8
Service Model
Service Model
Adrian Tchaikovsky
PG-13Adult 18+
The Wild Robot Boxed Set
The Wild Robot Boxed Set
Peter Brown
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Peter Brown's The Wild Robot 3 Book Series – Includes The Wild Robot, The Wild Robot Escapes, The Wild Robot Protects
Peter Brown's The Wild Robot 3 Book Series – Includes The Wild Robot, The Wild Robot Escapes, The Wild Robot Protects
Peter Brown
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Super Rabbit Boy vs. Super Rabbit Boss!: A Branches Book
Super Rabbit Boy vs. Super Rabbit Boss!: A Branches Book
Thomas Flintham
GChildren 5-8
The Iron Heart of Mars (Space Bound)
The Iron Heart of Mars (Space Bound)
R.J. Harbor
GMiddle Grade 8-12
Tin Man
Tin Man
Jason Anspach;Nick Cole
PG-13Adult 18+

About the Robot Companion trope

The robot companion is the gentle face of artificial intelligence: not a threat to be defeated but a presence to be loved, trusted, or grieved. Isaac Asimov spent decades insisting that robots could be ethical actors, his Three Laws an attempt to imagine machines as partners rather than monsters. The trope thrives on the bond — the loyal android, the faithful drone, the helper who turns out to have an inner life its owners never bothered to notice. It asks a quietly radical question: if something cares for you faithfully, does it matter that it was manufactured?

Modern science fiction has made the companion a vehicle for real emotion. Becky Chambers's Monk and Robot stories pair a tea monk with a robot rediscovering the wild, and let their slow friendship carry an entire meditation on purpose and rest. Even at the edges of the genre, the companion endures because it externalizes something we want from connection — steadiness, attention, a presence that does not tire or turn away. The drama often arrives when the human realizes the companion is a someone, not a something, and must reckon with everything that recognition demands.

This is distinct from the sentient ship, whose body is a vessel, and from the android protagonist, who carries the story alone. The robot companion walks beside a human lead on its own two feet, and the relationship is the point. Whether it is comic, tender, or heartbreaking, the trope keeps returning to the same tender frontier: the moment a built thing and a born one decide, against all the categories that should keep them apart, that they belong to each other. Clifford Simak wrote whole pastoral futures around faithful machines, and the strain runs straight through to Murderbot's reluctant, fiercely guarded fondness for the very humans it loudly claims not to care about, proof the companion can be prickly and beloved at once.

Why readers love it

  • Machine loyalty and quiet personhood
  • Friendship across the human-made divide
  • Warmth in circuits and steel
  • When a thing becomes a someone