Playground
by Richard Powers
When the Deepest Waters Are Made of Code
The Quick Look
In Playground, Richard Powers dives deep into the beauty and fragility of the Pacific while tangling with technology’s promise—and peril. Makatea’s reef-lined shores set the stage for a story that blends ocean conservation, board game strategy, and the rise of artificial intelligence. It’s an ambitious, idea-packed novel that soars in its exploration of the sea and stumbles in its late-game twist.
- Release Date: September24, 2024
- Pages: 381
- Genre: Literary Fiction
- Themes: Ocean conservation, AI and creativity, loss, technology vs. nature, human connection
- Read if you like: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, The Social Network, Moana
- Best for: Readers who love lush settings and philosophical what-ifs
- Skip if: You need an ending that sticks the landing
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The Full Review
SPOILERS AHEAD!!!
PLOT & PACING
From its opening chapters, Playground is an intricate dance between ocean science, game theory, and human longing. Powers draws you in with a narrative that feels vast but controlled—four lives converging on the tiny island of Makatea as it faces a vote that could change its future forever. The pace is deliberate, giving space for the reader to absorb the island’s ecology, the subtle politics of seasteading, and the inner landscapes of each character. For much of the novel, the tension builds in steady, satisfying waves—until the reveal that the Makatea storyline was AI-generated knocks the wind out of its sails. It’s a move that reframes the entire book, and while it’s intellectually intriguing, it lands as an emotional undercut, leaving the final pages feeling smaller than the journey that led there.
CHARACTER & VOICE
Evelyne Beaulieu’s chapters are where the book truly breathes—her dives, her meditations on cuttlefish courtship, and her reverence for the ocean carry a kind of quiet electricity. Through her, Powers captures both the wonder and the ache of studying a world in peril. Todd Keane, the tech mogul behind Playground, is complex in conception but often frustrating in execution; his faith in AI as a vessel for immortality makes him fascinating, if not always sympathetic. Rafi Young and Ina Aroita provide texture, connection, and grounding, but their arcs sometimes feel secondary, more like satellites than stars. Still, each voice adds a distinct current to the novel’s tide.
STYLE & ATMOSPHERE
Powers writes with the precision of a scientist and the soul of a poet. The reefs are alive with color, the waters hum with life, and Makatea’s limestone cliffs seem to glow on the page. His prose balances technical detail with lyrical sweep, making the science as compelling as the story. The ocean emerges as the book’s most consistent character—steady, ancient, and unaltered by human ego. Even when the plot falters, the sensory richness of the writing keeps you immersed.
THEMES & DEPTH
At its core, Playground isn’t just about AI—it’s about the boundaries of creation itself. Powers questions whether true originality is possible without lived experience, and whether technology can ever be more than an echo chamber for human thought. The environmental thread is urgent but never preachy, underscoring the fragile beauty of ecosystems and the ethical quagmire of exploiting them. The late-game AI twist doubles as a commentary on the limits of simulation, suggesting that the soul of art lies in its imperfections. It’s here that the novel’s ideas resonate most deeply, even if the delivery is uneven.
PERSONAL TAKE
For most of the book, I was enthralled—hooked by the layered structure, the intellectual chess match between characters, and Evelyne’s unflinching devotion to the sea. Powers gave me the sensation of holding something rare and intricate, like a shell you’re afraid to drop. Then the twist hit, and that shell cracked—revealing something clever, but not nearly as beautiful as what I thought I had. The disappointment lingers, but so does the conversation it sparks: about what AI can and can’t do, and about the irreplaceable value of human perspective. It’s a rare novel that leaves me conflicted in this way, both admiring the ambition and mourning the loss of what might have been.
The Final Verdict
A breathtaking setting, a thought-provoking premise, and a handful of unforgettable chapters. Playground asks big questions about creativity, mortality, and the cost of progress—though its late reveal may leave some readers adrift.
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