“an entertaining polemic … animated by a Cassandra sensibility that expects warnings to go unheeded.”<br /><b>Stuart Jeffries, <i>The Observer</i></b><b><i><br /><br /></i></b>“Powerful.”<i><br /></i><b>Matthew Gasda, <i>First Things<br /></i></b><i><br /></i>“[Han] is a serious and committed writer, relentless in his disdain for the way social media platforms and algorithms have disrupted our personal, political, and spiritual lives.”<br /><b><i>ArtAsiaPacific<br /><br /></i></b>“A valuable confrontation with the question of what ‘narrative’ actually is … thoughtful and generative.”<i><br /><b>The Conversation</b><br /><br /></i>“Like a Sartre for the age of screens, Han puts words to our prevailing condition of not-quite-hopeless digital despair.”<br /><b><i>The New Yorker<br /><br /></i></b>“A nicely packaged, interesting and thought-provoking meditation.” <br /><b>Complete Review<br /><br /></b>“Byung-Chul Han stands in the tradition of Jacques Ellul and Christopher Lasch … Reading any one of their books will result in never seeing things the same again.”<br /><b>Russell Moore, <i>Christianity Today</i><i><br /></i></b>