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The Tyranny of E-mail: The Four-thousand...
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Freeman takes an entertaining look at the nature of correspondence through the ages, considers the consequences of email overload, and enters a plea for communication that is ...Read more
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Fascinating!
This is a great book that gives an interesting and informative history of communication to elucidate how we got to the situation we are in today. Well written and well resear...Read more

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Synopsis
Freeman takes an entertaining look at the nature of correspondence through the ages, considers the consequences of email overload, and enters a plea for communication that is more selective and nuanced and, above all, more sociable.

Key Details
Author:John Freeman
Language:English
Publisher:Scribner
Format:Hardcover
ISBN-10:1416576738
ISBN-13:9781416576730

Additional Details
Edition Number:1

Size
Length:244 pages
Height:8.5 in
Width:5.8 in
Thickness:1 in
Weight:12.8 oz

Publisher's Note
"The computer and e-mail were sold to us as tools of liberation, but they have actually inhibited our ability to conduct our lives mindfully, with the deliberation and consideration that are the hallmark of true agency."

The first e-mail was sent less than forty years ago; by 2011, there will be 3.2 billion e-mail users. The average corporate worker now receives upwards of two hundred e-mails per day. The flood of messages is ceaseless and follows us everywhere. We check e-mail in transit; we check it in the bath. We check it before bed and upon waking up. We check it even in midconversation, blithely assuming no one will notice. We no longer make our own to-do list. E-mail does.

It's time for a break.

In The Tyranny of E-mail, John Freeman takes an entertaining look at the nature of correspondence through the ages. From love poems delivered on clay tablets to the art of the letter to the first era of information overload (via the telegraph) to the vast network brought on by the Internet, Freeman answers the difficult question, Where is this taking us?

Put down your BlackBerry and consider the consequences. As the toll of e-mail mounts by reducing our time for leisure and contemplation and by separating us from one another in an unending and lonely battle with the overfull inbox, John Freeman -- one of America's preeminent literary critics -- enters a plea for communication that is more selective and nuanced and, above all, more sociable.

In THE TYRANNY OF E-MAIL, John Freeman takes an entertaining look at the nature of correspondence through the ages. From love poems delivered on clay tablets to the art of the letter to the first era of information overload (via the telegraph) to the vast network brought on by the Internet, Freeman answers the difficult question, Where is this taking us?Put down your BlackBerry and consider the consequences. As the toll of e-mail mounts by reducing our time for leisure and contemplation and by separating us from one another in an unending and lonely battle with the overfull inbox, John Freeman--one of America's preeminent literary critics--enters a plea for communication that is more selective and nuanced and, above all, more sociable.

The award-winning former president of the National Book Critics Circle traces a short history of the human need for correspondence and examines the astonishing growth of email--and how it is changing our lives, not always for the better.

Industry Reviews
"With wise and entertaining prose, a book has arrived to awaken a nation of inveterate e-mail-checkers from their collective lunacy....John Freeman['s]....canny voice makes every page of this unlikely page-turner sing sweetly....Even if THE TYRANNY OF E-MAIL never prompts you to renegotiate your own relationship with technology, it's a funny read filled with anecdotes you'll want to share with friends. Preferably, in person."
(12/22/2009)

"I have felt e-mail's tyranny, and Freeman has some good innings on this subject....[But i]n his zeal to expose e-mail's dark side, Freeman...ignores its good and useful features."
(10/22/2009)

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The Tyranny of E-mail: The Four-thousand-Year Journey to Your Inbox by John Freeman (2009, Hardcover)
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Fascinating!

Created: 01/03/11
This is a great book that gives an interesting and informative history of communication to elucidate how we got to the situation we are in today. Well written and well researched, this tale is surprisingly captivating. It deserves a wide circulation.
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