Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

“An unexpected, inventive, heartfelt riff on the workplace novel-startup realism with a multiverse twist.” -Anna Wiener, author of Uncanny Valley

"Torian Brackett shines in his performance of this debut novel. Showing his impressive range as a narrator, Brackett deftly switches between descriptions of picturesque San Francisco neighborhoods and Block's endless questions about his priorities and future."- AudioFile

Introducing Josh Riedel's adrenaline-packed debut novel about a dating app employee who discovers a glitch that transports him to other worlds

Once you sign an NDA it's good for life. Meaning legally, I shouldn't tell you this story. But I have to.

A college grad with the six-figure debt to prove it, Ethan Block views San Francisco as the place to be. Yet his job at hot new dating app DateDate is a far cry from what he envisioned. Instead of making the world a better place, he reviews flagged photo queues, overworked and stressed out. But that's about to change.

Reeling from a breakup, Ethan decides to view his algorithmically matched soulmate on DateDate. He overrides the system and clicks on the profile. Then, he disappears. One minute, he's in a windowless office, and the next, he's in a field of endless grass, gasping for air. When Ethan snaps back to DateDate HQ, he's convinced a coding issue caused the blip. Except for anyone to believe him, he'll need evidence. As Ethan embarks on a wild goose chase, moving from dingy startup think tanks to Silicon Valley's dominant tech conglomerate, it becomes clear that there's more to DateDate than meets the eye. With the stakes rising, and a new world at risk, Ethan must choose who-and what-he believes in.

Adventurous and hypertimely, Please Report Your Bug Here is an inventive millennial coming-of-age story, a dark exploration of the corruption now synonymous with Big Tech, and, above all, a testament to the power of human connection in our digital era.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt & Company.

1141318113
Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

“An unexpected, inventive, heartfelt riff on the workplace novel-startup realism with a multiverse twist.” -Anna Wiener, author of Uncanny Valley

"Torian Brackett shines in his performance of this debut novel. Showing his impressive range as a narrator, Brackett deftly switches between descriptions of picturesque San Francisco neighborhoods and Block's endless questions about his priorities and future."- AudioFile

Introducing Josh Riedel's adrenaline-packed debut novel about a dating app employee who discovers a glitch that transports him to other worlds

Once you sign an NDA it's good for life. Meaning legally, I shouldn't tell you this story. But I have to.

A college grad with the six-figure debt to prove it, Ethan Block views San Francisco as the place to be. Yet his job at hot new dating app DateDate is a far cry from what he envisioned. Instead of making the world a better place, he reviews flagged photo queues, overworked and stressed out. But that's about to change.

Reeling from a breakup, Ethan decides to view his algorithmically matched soulmate on DateDate. He overrides the system and clicks on the profile. Then, he disappears. One minute, he's in a windowless office, and the next, he's in a field of endless grass, gasping for air. When Ethan snaps back to DateDate HQ, he's convinced a coding issue caused the blip. Except for anyone to believe him, he'll need evidence. As Ethan embarks on a wild goose chase, moving from dingy startup think tanks to Silicon Valley's dominant tech conglomerate, it becomes clear that there's more to DateDate than meets the eye. With the stakes rising, and a new world at risk, Ethan must choose who-and what-he believes in.

Adventurous and hypertimely, Please Report Your Bug Here is an inventive millennial coming-of-age story, a dark exploration of the corruption now synonymous with Big Tech, and, above all, a testament to the power of human connection in our digital era.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt & Company.

26.99 In Stock
Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

by Josh Riedel

Narrated by Torian Brackett

Unabridged — 9 hours, 22 minutes

Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

Please Report Your Bug Here: A Novel

by Josh Riedel

Narrated by Torian Brackett

Unabridged — 9 hours, 22 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$26.99
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Related collections and offers


Overview

“An unexpected, inventive, heartfelt riff on the workplace novel-startup realism with a multiverse twist.” -Anna Wiener, author of Uncanny Valley

"Torian Brackett shines in his performance of this debut novel. Showing his impressive range as a narrator, Brackett deftly switches between descriptions of picturesque San Francisco neighborhoods and Block's endless questions about his priorities and future."- AudioFile

Introducing Josh Riedel's adrenaline-packed debut novel about a dating app employee who discovers a glitch that transports him to other worlds

Once you sign an NDA it's good for life. Meaning legally, I shouldn't tell you this story. But I have to.

A college grad with the six-figure debt to prove it, Ethan Block views San Francisco as the place to be. Yet his job at hot new dating app DateDate is a far cry from what he envisioned. Instead of making the world a better place, he reviews flagged photo queues, overworked and stressed out. But that's about to change.

Reeling from a breakup, Ethan decides to view his algorithmically matched soulmate on DateDate. He overrides the system and clicks on the profile. Then, he disappears. One minute, he's in a windowless office, and the next, he's in a field of endless grass, gasping for air. When Ethan snaps back to DateDate HQ, he's convinced a coding issue caused the blip. Except for anyone to believe him, he'll need evidence. As Ethan embarks on a wild goose chase, moving from dingy startup think tanks to Silicon Valley's dominant tech conglomerate, it becomes clear that there's more to DateDate than meets the eye. With the stakes rising, and a new world at risk, Ethan must choose who-and what-he believes in.

Adventurous and hypertimely, Please Report Your Bug Here is an inventive millennial coming-of-age story, a dark exploration of the corruption now synonymous with Big Tech, and, above all, a testament to the power of human connection in our digital era.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt & Company.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"[A] sharp literary thriller."

New York Times

"Please Report Your Bug Here is a gripping literary thriller that forces us to confront our complicity in the technologies reshaping human connections, and it asks how far we will go to maintain those connections. Dark, funny, and highly inventive, Riedel’s debut is as addictive as the apps it criticizes."

Vulture

"This novel is a series of mysteries, played out in a well-paced narrative filled with frenetic energy. Riedel succeeds at capturing the intrapersonal dramas of a startup. . . . The novel has an alluring quality that keeps you turning pages."

Chicago Review of Books

"At its core, this workplace thriller with an eerie sci-fi twist illuminates the value of humanity in a digital world."

—Audible Blog, The 24 Hottest Debuts of 2023 So Far

"A smart exposé of the tech boom imbued with a touch of weird fantastical elements . . . Riedel makes the most of his removed narrator, who has enough distance from the events to offer sharp insights on gentrification, workplace ennui, and the uncanny ways that tech has blurred his sense of reality . . . It's impressive how much Riedel packs into this."

Publishers Weekly

"Riedel’s bio states that he was the first employee at Instagram and now holds an MFA, which explains his exquisite technical rendering of startup/app culture as well as his deeply romantic portrayal of contemporary San Francisco. The book is a great addition to the growing canon of literature examining the role and reach of Silicon Valley."

—Booklist

“Josh Riedel's inventive debut launches readers into a world of tech startups and media apps while also tackling art and reality and the possibility of portals to alternative worlds.”

—Shelf Awareness

Please Report Your Bug Here is a Silicon Valley gumshoe story that’s also a meditation on authenticity and connection in a world ever more mediated by technology. In this riveting and surreal debut, Josh Riedel explores the labyrinthine mysteries of Big Tech and of the human heart.”

—Helen Phillips, author of The Need

Please Report Your Bug Here is disarming and inspired, unafraid of big questions and deep longings. Josh Riedel writes the topics of early adulthood—the search for meaning chief among them—with humor, heart, and vivid, lived-in precision. This is a book about technology that reminds me that writing is tech, too, and that, behind all technology, there are humans, only wanting to connect.”

—Rachel Khong, author of Goodbye, Vitamin

“Like the electric-sheep dream of an Instagram bot, Please Report Your Bug Here is a vividly hyperspecific technotopian fantasy, portal-warping the reader to a parallel universe San Francisco eerily similar to the San Francisco IRL.”

—Matthew Baker, author of Why Visit America and Hybrid Creatures

“Compelling, assured, and brimming with incisive observations, Josh Riedel’s debut manages to explore so many of the major features and bugs of our contemporary existence—technology, art, capitalism, loneliness, the desire and search for connection—within a truly propulsive and highly imaginative page-turner. Reading Please Report Your Bug Here is an exhilarating and unsettling trip that, upon return, made me more awake to this world around us.”

—Alexandra Chang, author of Days of Distraction

Kirkus Reviews

2022-10-26
A Silicon Valley roman à clef with a twist, written by the first employee at Instagram.

Ethan Block is a 24-year-old living in San Francisco circa early 2010, working for a dating app called DateDate. He scrutinizes flagged user photos, manually assessing whether the images violate platform guidelines. Ethan is so immersed in the startup hustle that he basically ignores the rest of his life. “I had tremendous responsibility. Every support email I answered brought us closer to changing the world. And if DateDate changed the world, I changed the world.” When he isn’t reviewing content for The Foundera nameless, mercurial yuppie—Ethan is brooding over Isabel, a recent ex, or Noma, DateDate’s latest hire. One day at work, while viewing his top DateDate match, Ethan briefly feels himself falling into “a field, with tall, wet grass,” before snapping back to reality, believing his hallucinatory state to be the result of a “bug” in the app. Shortly thereafter, DateDate is acquired by the Corporation, a monolithic tech outfit suffused with faceless executives and preposterously advanced technology. Ethan spends the remainder of the novel pendulously obsessing over his encounter with the “bug” in DateDate. Framed as a retrospective of Ethan’s “existence as a corporate tech worker,” the novel’s intriguing premise of a fictionalized Silicon Valley insider tell-all invites urgent questions about how technology operates in our lives. Unfortunately, Riedel glosses over key leaps in story logic and is light on memorable descriptive language. Riedel evokes the bougie Silicon Valley ecosystem by peppering scenes with cultural references, regional markers, and New Age business-speak but leaves his characters frustratingly underdeveloped. The neutral affect of Ethan’s first-person narration flattens the personal and societal stakes of the story.

A diffuse homily on technology and identity that is easy to read and easy to forget.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940174852020
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 01/17/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews