Michael Harris is an award-winning journalist and a contributing editor at Western Living and Vancouver magazines. He lives in Toronto, Canada.
The End of Absence is a genial and philosophical tour through one
man's anxieties surrounding digital life
*The New York Times*
Harris has caught, with brilliant fidelity and incisiveness, a
hinge-point in modern history: Before and After the Digital
Rapture. The End of Absence deserves a place alongside Neil
Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death and Sherry Turkle's Life on
the Screen. A great, important (and fun) read. I couldn't in good
conscience lend out my copy: every other page is dog-eared
*Bruce Grierson, author of What Makes Olga Run*
This is a lovely, direct, and beautifully written book that will
make you feel good about living in the times we do. Michael Harris
is honest in a way I find increasingly rare: clear, truthful, and
free of vexation. A true must-read
*Douglas Coupland, author of Worst. Person. Ever. and Generation
X*
The End of Absence is a beautifully written and surprisingly
rousing book. Michael Harris scans the flotsam of our everyday,
tech-addled lives and pulls it all together to create a convincing
new way to talk about our relationship with the Internet. He has
taken the vague technological anxiety we all live with and shaped
it into a bold call for action
*Steven Galloway, author of The Confabulist and The Cellist of
Sarajevo*
Everybody over sixty should read this book. The rest of the
population will need no urging, unless they are too far gone to
read anything longer than a blurb. The first part reads like a
horror story, a shocking mind-thriller. In the second half the
author, despite real foreboding, demonstrates in his own person
that all is far from lost. Relief, after much learning
*Margaret Visser, author of Much Depends on Dinner*
In this thoughtful, well-written book, Michael Harris combines
personal narrative with the views of experts to show us that the
digital revolution that envelops us contains traps that can lead us
to understand less even as we seem to know more
*Barry Schwartz, author of The Paradox of Choice and Practical
Wisdom*
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