



Users
A Novel
-
-
3.3 • 3 Ratings
-
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
Finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction
A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
Marrying the philosophical absurdities of life, technology, start-up culture, and family, Users is for readers of Ling Ma, Dave Eggers’s The Circle, and viewers of the hit Apple TV+ original series Severance
Miles, a lead creative at a midsize virtual reality company known for its “original experiences,” has engineered a new product called The Ghost Lover. Wildly popular from the outset, the “game” is simple: a user’s simulated life is almost identical to their reality, except they’re haunted by the ghost of an ex-lover.
However, when a shift in the company's strategic vision puts The Ghost Lover at the center of a platform-wide controversy, Miles becomes the target of user outrage, and starts receiving a series of anonymous death threats. Typed notes sealed in envelopes with no postage or return address, these persistent threats push Miles into a paranoid panic, blurring his own sense of reality, catalyzing the collapse of his career, his marriage, and his relationship with his children.
The once-promising road to success becomes a narrow set of choices for Miles, who, in a last ditch effort to save his job, pitches his masterpiece, a revolutionary device code-named the Egg, which will transform the company. The consequences for Miles seal him inside the walls of his life as what was once anxiety explodes into devastating absoluteness.
In a world rife with the unchecked power and ambition of tech, Users investigates—with both humor and creeping dread—how interpersonal experiences and private decisions influence the hasty developments that have the power to permanently alter the landscape of human experience.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Winnette (The Job of the Wasp) delivers an engaging story of a virtual reality designer stuck in a rut. Miles's career founders as he casts about for a new product for his Chicago startup that rivals his signature augmented reality experience, "The Ghost Lover," where virtual reality players are haunted by an ephemeral lover personalized to their own experience. Meanwhile, his home life presents its own challenges; his marriage is struggling, and his 10-year-old daughter plays increasingly violent games with her younger sister. Perhaps most troubling, Miles acquires a "ghost lover" of his own, and he's receiving cryptic, anonymous death threats. The author convincingly portrays Miles's claustrophobic interior, where the protagonist is held captive by virtual simulacra. After a vacation with his family rekindles Miles's creativity, he plunges full speed into the creation of the "Egg," a virtual-reality pod that encases the user's body. Though a commercial and professional success, the Egg accelerates the dissolution of Miles's family, and brings him ever closer to the source of his elusive threats. Despite a rushed final act, the author offers a vertiginous glimpse down a tech rabbit hole. In Winnette's hands, the dangerous blur between the virtual and reality provides both a warning and a thrill.