Playground (novel)

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Playground
Playground (Richard Powers).png
First edition cover
Author Richard Powers
LanguageEnglish
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
Publication date
September 24, 2024
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages400
ISBN 978-1-324-08603-1
Preceded by Bewilderment  

Playground is a 2024 novel by Richard Powers, published on September 24, 2024, by W. W. Norton & Company. It received mostly positive reviews from critics. [1] [2] [3] It was longlisted for the 2024 Booker Prize. [4]

Contents

Plot summary

In a first-person narration, Todd Keane, a tech billionaire suffering from Dementia with Lewy bodies, recollects his childhood in Chicago, college years, and the building of fictional tech giant Playground, a gamified social media site with similarities to Reddit and Facebook.

Alternating chapters contain a third person narration describing the lives of people who had major influences on Todd.

Evie Beaulieu, loosely based on Dr. Sylvia Earle, is a marine biologist and diver who, faces sexism in her academia and the media but becomes a successful figure in popular science and nature advocacy. She publishes a children’s book about ocean life which was formative for a young Todd.

Rafi Young, a brilliant young student from a poor, majority Black neighborhood in South-side Chicago attends a private school with Todd, where they become rivals and friends joined by their love of games, especially Go. They live together in college, Todd studying computer science and Rafi literature. Rafi provides an essential element to Playground, namely that it must be gamified.

Ina Aroita, a sculptor who grew up in the South Pacific hadn’t stepped foot on a continent until she attends university in Illinois. She dates Rafi and becomes close to Todd as well. When she turns to Todd for advice after a fight with Rafi, Rafi takes offense and the three are separated and become estranged.

After Playground’s success, Rafi writes to Todd demanding a payout for his contribution. Todd settles out of court.

Todd and Ina now live on Makatea with two adopted children. Beaulieu, now in her nineties, is visiting to document the local reef. The island is in the middle of a referendum on whether to open up for development to a consortium of Californian tech companies interested in using it a base from which to manufacture and launch artificial islands.

When Rafi learns that Todd is an investor he fears the move is part of a scheme to get revenge for the money Rafi got from him. He urges the islanders to vote against it. Makatea agrees to the consortium’s request by a single vote.

Todd reveals that the sections of the novel he narrates are spoken to Playground’s latest model of generative AI, Profunda. The third-person sections are a story it has invented for him based off of his own memories and the public lives of himself, his friends and the real Evie Beaulieu. Evie in fact died in her seventies. Rafi died recently of a heart attack, leaving all his money to Ina. Todd admires Profunda’s story and asks the AI to finish it.

Todd arrives on the island in an AI piloted yacht. Ina and Rafi understand how ill their former friend has gotten, and know that he is not out for revenge. When he dies, he leaves his entire fortune to Ina. She pays for the benefits of development that the islanders hoped for, resulting in an immediate overturning of the referendum results. She and Evie discuss how to spend the rest of the fortune to protect the oceans. Todd is buried at sea with one of Ina’s sculptures.

References

  1. Dawoor, Yagnishsing (September 29, 2024). "Playground by Richard Powers review – an electrifyingly beautiful tale of tech and the ocean". The Observer. ISSN   0029-7712 . Retrieved February 2, 2025.
  2. Jacobs, Alexandra (September 22, 2024). "First He Spoke for the Trees; Now He Speaks for the Sea". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved February 2, 2025.
  3. "Oceanographers and tech billionaires clash in Polynesia". TLS. Retrieved February 2, 2025.
  4. Marshall, Alex (July 30, 2024). "Books by Rachel Kushner and Richard Powers Are Among Booker Prize Nominees". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331.