Burlington Books has carefully adapted Asimov’s dense prose into a reader-friendly format (typically ), preserving the intellectual depth while making the vocabulary and syntax accessible for ESL/EFL students. Plot Summary (Burlington Adaptation Context) The story follows Andrew Martin , a domestic NDR-series robot purchased by the Martin family. Unlike other robots, Andrew displays an uncanny trait: creativity . He carves a small wooden trinket—an act impossible under the Three Laws of Robotics.
Introduction: More Than a Robot Story At first glance, The Bicentennial Man —Isaac Asimov’s celebrated novella—appears to be a classic science fiction tale about a robot’s journey. However, the Burlington Books edition transforms this narrative into a powerful linguistic and philosophical tool for English learners. This isn’t just a story about circuits and positronic brains; it’s a two-century-long meditation on identity, creativity, law, mortality, and what it truly means to be human.
For learners, it’s proof that English can articulate the deepest questions of identity, love, and freedom.
For teachers, it offers a rare chance to teach conditionals (What if a robot had rights?), modals of possibility (Andrew might have feelings), and advanced adjectives (persistent, resilient, obsolete).