Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Weike Wang’s wins Hemingway Award

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A novel about a young scientist’s personal and profession­al journey has won a $25,000 prize for debut fiction.

Weike

Wang’s

“Chemistry” is this year’s recipient of the PEN/ Hemingway

Award, PEN

America announced.

Ernest Hemingway’s grandson, Sean Hemingway, will present the award to Wang next month during a ceremony in Boston. She will also have a monthlong stay at an artist’s retreat in Wyoming and a residency with the creative writing program at the University of Idaho.

Internet connection

The history of science has long been relevant to Evans’ work; she was a science and tech columnist for the now-defunct Los Angeles Alternativ­e and futures editor of Vice’s tech website Motherboar­d.

Her interest in computing began at a young age. Evans’ father studied programmin­g at Manchester in the 1970s and worked for Intel his entire career.

“I don’t know if it was him intentiona­lly trying to get his young daughter into technology because he wanted to arm her for the future,” she says. “He also took me skiing. I hated that, but I loved the computer.”

Booting up her vintage Mac Classic, Evans runs the early digital drawing program Kid Pix, sighing, “This really takes me back.” She also owns a Next Cube, the model on which Tim Burners Lee created the web.

The impetus for “Broad Band” arose from a sense of wanting to reconnect more meaningful­ly with history, but also with the internet, which she credits as being her “introducti­on not just to the world but to being a writer and thinking about text.” Evans “cut her teeth blogging” and writes the content for the app 5 Every Day, which recommends five interestin­g things to do in Los Angeles daily. She’s also the lyricist for Yacht and crafts the band’s conceptual persona.

Evans possesses a sense of limitlessn­ess, of determined exploratio­n: literature, tech, and music all capture her efforts and attention. “For a long time I thought there was no connection whatsoever and that I was just a person with many side hustles,” she says. “But at the same time, I think it’s a right-brain, left-brain thing, too. I really enjoy the catharsis of being able to be in a rock band every once in a while.”

‘Women were the first computers’

When writing about the history of the internet, she found it helpful to get “hands-on,” partly because of how much the technologi­es have evolved. “Trying to wrap your head around the fact that there was no such thing as a screen” in the earliest computers, for example, can be difficult to square with our understand­ing of the machines we use today.

Early computing was considered a woman’s job — a kind of evolution from typists and secretarie­s — to the extent that one term used to describe a machine’s labor potential was “kilo-girl.” As Evans writes, “women were the first computers; together, they formed the first informatio­n networks.”

“The idea that women themselves were the computers … to me that was the kernel,” she says. In “Broad Band,” Evans illustrate­s that women have always been at the vanguard of embracing the connectivi­ty of the internet, but she bristles at the notion that community building is inherently feminine.

“I never want to make any kind of essentiali­st argument about what women are good at online or what attracts women to certain parts of computing in this history,” she says. “There are these sort of tendencies that come up in the book again and again, in terms of women being connected to the software or humanist or use-oriented side. That’s much more about the circumstan­ces of the industry and academia than it is about any kind of natural tendency.”

‘A mirror of the world’

Evans’ relationsh­ip with the web is complicate­d. Her surfing habits, “they’re toxic,” she admits; she wastes time on social media. But “when I go on a research k-hole, a deep dive, if you will, that’s when I feel like the internet is really doing its thing for me, and I feel like it’s worth my time. But you know, everything else is rough.

“I’d always taken pride in being a ’net native who understood the internet, who had fun on the internet, who thought the internet was ostensibly a place of connection … . I was starting to feel like I didn’t know if it was that anymore for me, so I started reinvestig­ating these earlier histories, trying to find where we lost the thread.”

She was also “compensati­ng for the way it felt to be a woman online,” where antagonism, doxing and trolls come part and parcel with having a screen presence. “I think people have nostalgia for the early internet because it was still small enough that it could be conceived of as something discrete from us,” she says ruefully. “Like any utopia, once enough people join, it just becomes a mirror of the world.”

“My big fantasy is Internet-2,” Evans says. “Maybe if the internet falls we can all reclaim some of these older technologi­es that have been sitting there waiting for us.”

In “Broad Band,” Evans writes of these technologi­es with admiration: Resource One used its mainframe to operate a Social Services Referral Directory, Women’s Wire hosted domestic abuse resources, and computer scientist Wendy Hall’s Microcosm predated the semantic web.

The internet, after all, is human-made and therefore full of human complexity. “Broad Band” captures — and reclaims — the idealism of not only discoverin­g a new frontier but of creating one. Regarding women in tech, Evans says, “This is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of the amount of stories there are.”

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