Faster cover art

Faster

The Acceleration of Just About Everything

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About this listen

From the bestselling, National Book Award-nominated author of Genius and Chaos, a bracing new work about the accelerating pace of change in today's world.

Most of us suffer some degree of "hurry sickness." a malady that has launched us into the "epoch of the nanosecond," a need-everything-yesterday sphere dominated by cell phones, computers, faxes, and remote controls. Yet for all the hours, minutes, and even seconds being saved, we're still filling our days to the point that we have no time for such basic human activities as eating, sex, and relating to our families. Written with fresh insight and thorough research, Faster is a wise and witty look at a harried world not likely to slow down anytime soon.
History & Culture Professionals & Academics Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Science & Technology Social Psychology & Interactions Sociology Technology & Society

Critic reviews

Praise for James Gleick:

Chaos
"Chaos is not only enthralling and precise, but full of beautifully strange and strangely beautiful ideas."
-- Douglas Hofstadter

"There is a teleological grandeur about this new math that gives the imagination wings."
-- Vogue

"Gleick has a novelist's touch for describing his scientists and their settings, an eye for the apt analogy, and a sense of the dramatic and the poetic."
-- The San Francisco Chronicle

Genius
"The clearest statement I have seen of the true spirit of science. Although I am a long-time friend and admirer of Feynman, I feel that I know him better after reading this book than I did before."
-- Freeman Dyson

"A rare jewel-like biography. I can't remember a book in which, confronted with a personality so complex and a subject so difficult, I felt, as a reader, so secure."
-- Robert Kanigel, The Washington Post
All stars
Most relevant
Dated, slow, tedious. Not what I was hoping for. A was initially disappointed that I couldn't get hold of the unabridged version but once I started listening to it I realised how fortunate I had been.



If you enjoyed the excellent "Chaos: Making a New Science" and "The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood" also by James Gleick don't listen to this - it's not in the same league.

A bit of a Disappointment

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