Whisk-217 isn't like other cockroaches. While his three hundred siblings focus on survival - finding food, avoiding shoes, staying alive - he's more interested in observation, philosophy, and understanding the peculiar creatures called humans.When he discovers he can learn to read, a whole new world opens up. And what he reads baffles him: humans, the supposedly smartest species on Earth, have created problems so trivial yet remain paralyzed in solving them. They debate endlessly while people go hungry. They form committees to discuss forming committees. They've built a world so safe they've forgotten how to make simple decisions.Clearly, humans need help.Armed with gesture-recognition software, text-to-speech technology, and audacious confidence, Whisk-217 does the unthinkable: he infiltrates human society. As "Reed Solomon," a mysterious political commentator, he begins offering solutions to humanity's self-inflicted problems-solutions so obvious from an outsider's perspective that they quickly go viral.But maintaining a double life is complicated when you're a cockroach. Especially when you start falling for your human roommate. Especially when the world demands to see your face. And especially when your hired actor can't dodge spiders during live presentations.As Whisk-217's influence grows, so does the impossibility of his deception. Caught between two worlds - the one he came from and the one he's trying to change - he must decide: keep hiding behind a human face, or reveal the uncomfortable truth that intelligence, consciousness, and the ability to change the world aren't exclusively human traits.Sometimes the smallest voices have the biggest things to say.If only anyone would listen to a cockroach.