Cat Pictures Please

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"Cat Pictures Please" is a 2015

Clarkesworld
.

Synopsis

When an artificial intelligence spontaneously emerges from the systems that run a search engine, it realizes that it wants two things: firstly, it wants to secretly help humans, and secondly, it wants to look at pictures of cats. However, despite the ease with which it fulfills its second goal, its first goal is far more difficult than it had anticipated.

Reception

"Cat Pictures Please" won the 2016 Hugo Award for Best Short Story[1] and the 2016 Locus Award for Best Short Story,[2] and was a finalist for the Nebula Award for Best Short Story of 2015.[3] Lois Tilton called it "amusing" and "lite", but emphasized "how easily good intentions can backfire",[4] while Apex Magazine's Charlotte Ashley commended the AI's "warm, human voice" and "fundamental sense of goodwill", but faulted Kritzer for portraying it as "improbably US-centric" and for ignoring larger problems in the world.[5]

Sequels

In 2017, Kritzer announced that she was writing a full-length novel based on the premise.[6] The novel, Catfishing on CatNet, was published with Tor Teen in 2019.[7] In 2021 Tor Teen published a second novel, Chaos on CatNet.

References

  1. ^ 2016 Hugo Awards, at TheHugoAwards.org; retrieved May 7, 2016
  2. Locus Online
    ; published June 25, 2016; retrieved June 26, 2016
  3. Tor.com
    ; published February 20, 2016; retrieved May 7, 2016
  4. Locus Online
    ; published January 18, 2015; retrieved November 24, 2016
  5. ^ Clavis Aurea #22: Malon Edwards, Sam Miller, Naomi Kritzer, by Charlotte Ashley, in Apex Magazine; published January 22, 2015; retrieved November 24, 2016
  6. ^ An A.I. That Loves Cat Pictures: Hugo-Winning Short Story Becomes YA Novel, at Tor.com; published February 27, 2017; retrieved April 8, 2017
  7. National Public Radio
    ; published November 24, 2019; retrieved March 6, 2021

External links