Where to Start with Ernest Cline: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Ernest Cline — how to approach Ready Player One, his propulsive science fiction adventure set in a virtual reality dystopia, saturated with 1980s pop culture and driven by a relentless treasure hunt plot. A complete reading guide.
Ernest Cline (born 1972) is an American author and screenwriter from Ashland, Ohio, whose debut novel Ready Player One (2011) became an international bestseller and was adapted into a major film by Steven Spielberg in 2018. Cline spent several years working in various jobs while writing screenplays before completing the novel; its combination of nostalgic 1980s pop culture, fast-paced adventure plotting, and plausible near-future virtual reality setting found an enormous readership across generations of science fiction and gaming enthusiasts.
Where to Start: Ready Player One (2011)
The essential Ernest Cline — and one of the most purely entertaining science fiction adventures of the past decade. Ready Player One opens in 2044, in a world that has deteriorated substantially: energy shortages, economic collapse, massive poverty, and the kind of institutional failure that produces stacks of trailers literally piled on top of each other in the desolate geography of places like Oklahoma. Most of humanity has responded by escaping — not to another country but into the OASIS, a vast virtual reality universe where you can attend school, socialise, fight, fall in love, and explore billions of virtual worlds, all for the cost of a basic VR headset.
The OASIS is the book’s central imaginative achievement. Created by James Halliday — reclusive, 1980s-obsessed, the richest person in the world — it is a platform so large and so deeply integrated into everyday life that the distinction between virtual and physical existence has meaningfully blurred for its hundreds of millions of users. Wade Watts, the protagonist, lives in poverty in the stacks of Oklahoma City, where physical reality offers almost nothing of value; in the OASIS he attends school, has friends, and has spent years studying the exhaustive catalogue of 1980s pop culture that Halliday was obsessed with.
The contest that drives the plot is Halliday’s final gift: somewhere in the OASIS he has hidden an Easter egg. The first person to find it inherits his fortune and controlling interest in the company that owns the OASIS. For five years, competitors (called gunters — egg hunters) have searched the billions of virtual worlds without finding the first clue. Then Wade solves it, and everything changes.
The book’s plot mechanics are its greatest strength. The treasure hunt structure gives the narrative relentless forward momentum — each clue found leads immediately to the next challenge, the stakes escalate consistently, and the corporate antagonists (IOI, a corporation that wants to monetise the OASIS by charging users) are always present and credibly threatening. Cline writes with a genre craftsman’s understanding of how to keep pages turning.
The 1980s pop culture saturation is the element most readers either love or find overwhelming. The clues in Halliday’s contest are encoded in specific games, films, albums, and television shows from the 1980s, which means the plot literally requires engagement with this material. For readers who share the nostalgia, it is a delight. For readers who don’t, the references function as unfamiliar texture rather than emotional resonance — still navigable, but at reduced intensity.
Reading Ernest Cline
Ready Player One is Cline’s essential and most successful book. Readers who want to continue with the story should move to Ready Player Two (2020), which follows directly from the events of the first novel, though it has been more divisively received.
For the full Ernest Cline bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Ernest Cline author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Ernest Cline?
Ready Player One (2011) is Cline's essential book — a science fiction adventure set in 2044, when most of humanity escapes a deteriorating physical world into the OASIS, a vast virtual reality universe. The creator of the OASIS dies and leaves a contest: find the hidden Easter egg somewhere in its billions of virtual worlds to inherit his fortune and control of the platform. The novel follows Wade Watts, a teenager living in poverty who has spent years studying the 1980s pop culture obsessions of the OASIS creator, as he becomes the first person to advance in the contest in five years.
What is Ready Player One about?
Ready Player One is a treasure hunt story with a science fiction frame. The plot is built around a global competition to find clues hidden in a virtual reality world by its recently deceased creator — clues accessible only to someone with encyclopedic knowledge of 1980s video games, films, television, and music. The race between independent competitors and a corporate giant that wants to monetise the OASIS gives the plot its central conflict. The book is primarily interested in its plot mechanics and its vision of virtual reality; the themes (corporate control of information, the trade-offs between virtual and physical existence) are present but secondary to the adventure.
Do I need to know 1980s pop culture to enjoy Ready Player One?
Not entirely, but it helps significantly. The novel is saturated in 1980s references — specific Atari games, John Hughes films, particular albums and television shows — which function as both the plot's puzzle elements and its primary texture. Readers who grew up with this material will find it nostalgic and fun; readers who didn't may find it unfamiliar but can still follow the plot, as Cline explains most references. The book's momentum carries readers through unfamiliar cultural territory, but those who share its nostalgia will get considerably more from the experience.
What should I read after Ready Player One?
After Ready Player One, Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash is the science fiction novel that imagined the metaverse decades earlier, with considerably more technical depth and literary ambition. For more adventure-driven science fiction with similar momentum, Andy Weir's The Martian provides the same propulsive readability in a harder science fiction frame. Cline's own Ready Player Two (2020) continues the story, though it has been more divisively received than the original.
