For most of us in the west, the manner in which life is channeled
through the internet and the way media and people around us perpetually reinforce
the perceived importance of science and technology, are now commonplace. In tandem with our daily social interaction
at work or school, we think nothing of maintaining a wide variety of online
profiles/personalities, being social without being physically present, walking in
a bubble of headphones, mobile phone or other gadgetry, and, generally
speaking, existing at a virtual distance from tangible existence. On the other end of that line, the related
activities are being measured to greater and greater detail, to the point
nearly everything we do is quantified in some fashion by somebody, often even ourselves. Personal as well as Big Data being collected
for a variety of purposes, our identities are scattered to social, corporate, consumer,
and bureaucratic winds, and reconsolidated in one form or another for a variety
of purposes. Corporeal existence seemingly
the last bastion for the idea of self as a whole, even self-perception renders that
subjective. Enter Dexter Palmer’s superb
2016 novel, Version Control.
Rebecca Wright is an ordinary millennial. Growing up in suburban New Jersey to a
largely normal family, she goes to university, does relatively well, makes
meaningful friendships while studying, and graduates believing a career is waiting
for her. Living with her parents while working
a wide variety of part-time jobs throughout her 20s, Rebecca is nevertheless
able to maintain her bffs from university.
The girls regularly going out for drinking and fun, the dynamic starts
to change the older they get. One by one
the friends start relationships that slowly split the group apart, mostly through
a dating website called Loveability. Eventually,
Rebecca gives in and creates her own profile.
Meeting the experimental physicist Philip Steiner, things take an unexpected
turn in her life. Phillip older than
Rebecca by a few years, and possessing a personality far differently tuned from
her own, Rebecca’s grounded, relaxed view contrasts heavily with his purposeful
and abstract mindset. But their marriage
is only the beginning of changes in Rebecca’s life.