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The Bug by Ellen Ullman β€” book cover
Computers & the Internet, Programming

The Bug

by Ellen Ullman
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Synopsis

In 1984, at the dawn of the personal-computer era, novice software tester Roberta Walton stumbles across a bug. She brings it to its inadvertent creator, longtime programmer Ethan Levin, and the two embark on a hunt for the elusive bug, nicknamed “The Jester” for its tendency to appear randomly and only at the least opportune moments, jeopardizing the fate of the company. Ethan’s attempts to find a solution soon become a frightening obsession that threatens to destroy both his professional and personal life. Roberta, on the other hand, is drawn to the challenge. Forced to learn how to program, and seeking refuge from her own private troubles, she becomes enthralled with learning to speak the computer’s language. Expertly merging code with prose, big ideas with intensely personal stories, Ellen Ullman brilliantly illuminates the space between human beings and computers—a space we occupy every day as we peer into our monitors.

The New York Times

The novel of ideas is alive and well and here to defend humanity from the machines as they encroach from every side. It might be too late to save the likes of Ethan Levin, but there's still time for the rest of us. — Benjamin Anastas

About the Author, Ellen Ullman

Ellen Ullman began programming in the early years of the personal-computing era. She is the author of Close to the Machine, the classic memoir about computing culture. Ullman is a frequent contributor to Harper's and Salon, and is a contributing editor at The American Scholar. She lives and works in San Francisco

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Book Details

Published
July 1, 2004
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781400032358

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