"Press Enter" | |
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Short story byJohn Varley | |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | science fiction |
Publication | |
Published in | Asimov's Science Fiction |
Publication date | May 1984 |
"Press Enter", often stylizedPRESS ENTER ■, is ascience fiction novella by American writerJohn Varley originally published in the May 1984 issue ofIsaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine.[1] In 1985 it won theLocus Award for Best Novella,[2]Hugo Award for Best Novella andNebula Award for Best Novella.[3][4]
Korean War veteran Victor Apfel discovers his neighbor, Charles Kluge, has died and bequeathed a significant inheritance to him. TheLos Angeles Police Department is satisfied that Kluge has died by suicide, but a parallel investigation byCaltech computer expert Lisa Foo reveals that Kluge washacking into dangerous, secretive government agencies that may have been involved in his death. Foo and Apfel become involved romantically as she follows Kluge's trail, exposing them to the same dangers.
N. Katherine Hayles noted the novella exhibited "a phobic reaction to the connection [between humans and a computer network] as an unbearable form of intimacy", with the precise moment of connecting being when Apfel first receives an automated phone call at the start of the story. Foo is more explicitly described as acyborg, both for herbreast implants (which she uses formammary intercourse, calling the act "touring the silicone valley") and her computer expertise.[7]: 160, 166 Donna Haraway is displeased with the manner and violence with which one character is killed, calling it "excessive destruction".[8]: 355
The names of many of the characters areinside jokes based on the computer brands and culture at the time: "Victor Apfel" combines the German forApple with either (or both) theVIC-20 and/orVictor Technology, a popular European computer manufacturer;Lisa was the predecessor of theMacintosh,Foo a programming term for an otherwise unidentified object, "Kluge" a term (usuallykludge) for a cobbled-together system, and so on with several other names.