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ATTENTION!: A (short) History

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Shipped from UK, please allow 10 to 21 business days for arrival. A very good, clean & sound copy.

Hardcover

Published May 20, 2013

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About the author

Joshua Cohen

101 books589 followers
Joshua Aaron Cohen (born September 6, 1980 in New Jersey) is an American novelist and writer of stories.

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Profile Image for Jill Elizabeth.
1,988 reviews50 followers
done-with
June 19, 2018
OK, I've been trying - and trying - but cannot grasp the purpose of this book, or find the energy to continue to read it. Ironic, considering the title/subject matter I know, but I can't help it. I've more than given it the ol' college try...

The concept is great, and there are moments of brilliance. BUT... (and yes, that's a BIG "but") The execution and organization are all over the place with this one... A vast majority of it feels like a political rant/ramble - in many ways, redolent of another one I had difficulty with recently, Fake by Kati Stevens. Yes, Trump is a problem. Yes, current sociopolitical and popular culture are in tatters, as are attention spans, logical consistency, information overload without any sense of context or validity, intellectual endeavors and interests, and a general sense of goodness, kindness, and optimism. I agree with all of those things. But I can't listen to one more rambling rant about them, because they all sound the same. And they all sound the same because so many of us agree on the problem(s). I get it, I do - but I am getting extra weary of the focus on how bad it is without any attempts at coming up with solutions or adaptation ideas or survival strategies...

I found this book difficult to read. There are chapter-long presentations on things like the decline of Atlantic City and the rise and fall of Ringling Brothers circus, interspersed with truly random and (to me) largely indecipherable "From the Diaries" anecdotes. While the AC and circus bits were interesting enough, I don't see what on earth they have to do with the challenges in maintaining attentiveness in an increasingly data-glutted and attention-deficit culture. The book felt random and all over the place, like a rant from a favorite uncle or old schoolteacher. You may like him and find him generally sympathetic and similarly opinionated as you. His stories may be interesting and insightful. But you still tend to veer off with a nervous laugh and wave at an imaginary friend across the room after a while, because there's only so much tangential story-telling you can take in one sitting...

My review copy was provided by NetGalley.
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