Essentially, this is a short story collection framed by another story to make it cohesive, a novel of surprising power.
This is a world where humans have become the minority and machines rule it. There is great fear and anger carried by the humans and they hate the machines, who've become to advanced as to appear human, to act human.
The novel's narrated by a storyteller. He travels between colonies to tell stories, to share movies, as the human world is a much smaller place, sort of stuck in the end of the 20th century, technologically. Quickly he encounters Ibis, an android, whom he tries to fight. He loses, is injured, and she takes him to a machine city, for lack of a better word. There we discover her intentions: She wants to tell him stories.
And so she does. She tells him only stories that are fiction, which we disappear into--leaving Ibis and the narrator behind--and then, after the story is finished, we go back to our distrustful narrator. This process repeats until we come to the only nonfiction story: The story of Ibis' life.
It's hard to judge the writing here, because it may be a translation problem more than a problem of the author. But the actual writing is simply okay. It's not prose that's going to impress you or leave you begging for more, but the stories are quite good. And, more than the individual stories that make up the novel, the shape of the novel is what makes this a worthy read. It's a powerful book, really, about the nature of truth, of language, but, mostly, it's about the power of stories. How stories can heal us, can save us, will change us.
They are stories about the future [though, within the novel, they're the distant past] that reflect so clearly what life is now. It is a book about peace, about the beauty of differences. It is not about tolerating those who are different, but accepting them. Android, robots, AI, or whathaveyou stand in for every minority group to great effect, but they also stand in for themselves, and the fear and distrust many humans carry for the progression of technology.
They speak of our fears, of the fears that lead to tragedies, to racism, to unspeakable evils, and give, in simple and clear terms, the absurdity of these fears. That the other needn't be an aggressor, but may just be another sentience wishing to live, to help others live.
It's a beautiful book, despite the sometimes clumsy writing.