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Tom Ue (33328315)
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On: Tue, 27 Jun 2023 22:02:56
FICT 13 (1) pp. 97–102 Intellect Limited 2023
Short Fiction in Theory & Practice
Volume 13 Number 1
www.intellectbooks.com 97
REPORT
TOM UE
Dalhousie University
Resocialization and
regeneration in Ernest Cline’s
‘The Omnibot Incident’
ABSTRACT
This report contributes to scholarship on the bestselling American writer Ernest
Cline by examining his critically neglected short story ‘The Omnibot Incident’
(2014). It begins by revealing continuities between ‘Incident’ and his ambitious
novels Ready Player One (2011) and Ready Player Two (2020). Across these
works, we meet, for example, characters who turn to popular culture for compen-
sation, and in the more recent titles, robots who go (or appear to go) rogue. I go
on to suggest that the story’s form, particularly its economy, makes it especially
hospitable for exploring how the central character Wyatt overcomes grief following
his mother’s death. Notwithstanding the close resemblance in the names ‘Wyatt’
and ‘Wade Watts’, the protagonist of Cline’s novels, Wyatt is far more successful
with prioritizing his family over the fantasies presented by science fiction. My
broader claim is that we can deepen our understanding of and appreciation for
Cline’s programme by looking at his short fiction.
KEYWORDS
Ernest Cline
Ready Player One
Ready Player Two
AI
grief
loneliness
robot
short fiction
© 2023 Intellect Ltd Report. English language. https://doi.org/10.1386/fict_00078_7