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3+ oeuvres 154 utilisateurs 41 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Howard Axelrod is the author of The Point of Vanishing: A Memoir of Two Years in Solitude, named one of the best books of 2015 by Slate, the Chicago Tribune, and Entropy Magazine, and one of the best memoirs of 2015 by library Journal. His essays have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, 0 afficher plus Magazine, Politico, the Paris Review, and Salon, among others. He is currently the director of the Creative Writing Program at Loyola University in Chicago. afficher moins

Œuvres de Howard Axelrod

Oeuvres associées

Letter to a Stranger: Essays to the Ones Who Haunt Us (2021) — Contributeur — 62 exemplaires

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Nom canonique
Axelrod, Howard
Sexe
male

Membres

Critiques

A memoir chronicling the search for one's authentic self following a young man's loss of sight. I really liked this book. The writing was accomplished, and the story was one I often identified with (going to the wilderness to find oneself).
 
Signalé
jemisonreads | 38 autres critiques | Jan 22, 2024 |
Looking back over the past generation you could easily be tempted to describe its entirety in a single word: progress. Time progressed, technology progressed, and society progressed right alongside, but author Howard Axelrod asks in his new book, "The Stars in Our Pockets: Getting Lost and Sometimes Found in the Digital Age", has our humanity and our empathy gone the other way?

Axelrod returned from a two-year escape into the Vermont wilderness to find a society eagerly rushing into online communities in an effort to be more connected, all while not looking up from their phones at the people sitting across the dinner table. He warns that in a world of instantaneous answers we are forgetting how to ask the right questions.

"The Stars in Our Pockets" builds an elegant window for us to look through and see what we are in danger of becoming. Our social structure is becoming increasingly frayed and “growing up” no longer holds the same meaning as “evolving” or even “learning”. At a time when all information is literally at our fingertips, the internet and those who profit from it are building stronger, and more invisible, echo chambers for us to live in.

Part memoir, part treatise, Axelrod reminds us of all the things we stand to lose if we continue to head in this direction. Without the silence of being truly disconnected from the constant beeps, chirps, and ever-changing vibrations in your pockets clamoring for our attention, we lack the ability to think deeply on any one thing. Our attention span retreats and dissolves until it is no longer a span of time, but instead a mere moment.

While admitting his escape into the woods more than a touch Thoreau, he doesn’t shout from his soapbox for everyone to unplug and immigrate out of cyberspace for good. There are incredibly positive attributes to the technology powering our future if we only take the time to see them and properly evangelize them. Towards the end of the book he even lays out a very reasonable and achievable blueprint for creating a new digital platform centered around voter education and participation.

"The Stars in Our Pockets: Getting Lost and Sometimes Found in the Digital Age" plays a dual role as map to the past and blueprint of our future. It will serve those well who put down their phone long enough to read it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
LukeGoldstein | 1 autre critique | Aug 10, 2021 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I always admire people who share their stories via books. Brave people no matter the topic. I enjoyed Howard's journey, and I am happy to have won this from LibraryThing.
 
Signalé
patsaintsfan | 38 autres critiques | Nov 5, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Aussi par
1
Membres
154
Popularité
#135,795
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
41
ISBN
12
Langues
1

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