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Press Enter ⬛ [short story]

par John Varley

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1195230,060 (3.98)1
This Hugo and Nebula Award-winning novella is part murder mystery, part romance, and more than a little bit scary.Victor Apfel, a troubled war vet, gets an odd, pre-recorded phone message, instructing him to go inside the house next door. He opens the door to find his neighbor shot through the head. But is it suicide - or murder? And is it possible that a computer is to blame?… (plus d'informations)
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5 sur 5
This IS a dated book. The premise that a computer network and/or government agencies are dangerous was still a new one to use in SciFi in the 80s, but now it's a bit, (yawn) overdone? ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/bloodchild-by-octavia-e-butler-press-enter-%e2%9...

This is a straightforward story, set in the present day (the 1980s). A murderous AI, developed within the existing computer network, kills the narrator's neighbour and then the woman he loves when they get wind of its existence, and the narrator ends the story holed up in his own home, hoping that he has successfully cut off all points of connection with the outside world; but we sense that he may be doomed anyway.

There's obvious wish fulfillment in the middle aged narrator scoring with a beautiful hacker babe half his age, but apart from that it's well enough executed, especially if you haven't been spoilered for it by reading this review; the previous year's “Blood Music” maybe did something similar a little better, and it also shares a theme with Neuromancer. ( )
  nwhyte | May 10, 2022 |
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.

IF YOU WISH TO KNOW MORE PRESS ENTER ■

Victor Apfel, a lonely middle-aged veteran of the Korean War, gets a recorded phone call asking him to come to his reclusive neighbor’s house to take care of what he finds there. The voice promises that he’ll be rewarded. Victor would like to ignore the message, but he gets another call every 10 minutes. When Victor arrives at Charles Kluge’s house, he finds Kluge dead and slumped over his computer keyboard, so he calls another neighbor — a computer operator named Hal (har, har) — and the cops. When the computer screen asks them to PRESS ENTER, they do, and this initiates Kluge’s strange interactive suicide note. Things get weirder when Victor finds a large deposit in his bank account and the cops find no record anywhere of Charles Kluge. Even the IRS didn’t know about him.

The police investigator doesn’t think it’s a suicide, so they hire a Vietnamese computer programmer named Lisa Foo to figure out what Kluge was up to. When she drives up in her silver Ferrari, she brings a little joy to Victor’s lonely existence. As the two of them get to know each other, both start to deal with troublesome issues such as Victor’s serious medical condition and the horrors of the wars they’ve lived through and the racism those experiences engendered. (The focus on the geo-politics of Southeast Asia during the middle 20th century is a refreshing change from the Western focus of most science fiction.)

Press Enter, which won the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Awards for Best Novella in 1985, works on so many levels — it’s a romance, murder mystery, psychological drama, and horror story. It’s exciting, moving, and scary. Though Press Enter is set in the early 1980s, it feels nostalgic rather than dated. Discussions comparing and contrasting the computer to the human brain feel current, as does Lisa’s understanding that her skill with computer programming gives her power over others — power that could corrupt her.

I read Audible Frontier’s version of Press Enter which is 3 hours long and is narrated by Peter Ganim, who does a nice job, as usual. Press Enter is going to stay with me, and not just because I have a son who’s about to leave for college to study computer programming (shudder). I was enthralled from the first sentence to the last. ( )
  Kat_Hooper | Apr 6, 2014 |
This definitely has the feel of a computer book written during the 80's or before. That said, it's an easy read that I finished in a few hours (if that). ( )
  steadfastreader | Mar 18, 2014 |
5 sur 5
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This Hugo and Nebula Award-winning novella is part murder mystery, part romance, and more than a little bit scary.Victor Apfel, a troubled war vet, gets an odd, pre-recorded phone message, instructing him to go inside the house next door. He opens the door to find his neighbor shot through the head. But is it suicide - or murder? And is it possible that a computer is to blame?

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