×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?
Explore Now
LEND ME®
See Details
9.99
In Stock
Overview
1994, northern California. The Internet is just emerging from its origins in the military and university research labs. Groups of idealistic technologists, recognizing its potential as a tool for liberation and solidarity, are working feverishly to build the network.
In the early chat rooms of one such gathering, soon-to-become-famous as The WELL, a Stanford futurist named Tom Mandel creates a new conference. In a topic headed "Local Bug Report" he asks for advice from fellow online participants about how he might shake off a persistent hacking cough. A few weeks into the conversation it emerges that Mandel's illness is something serious. Within six months he is dead.
This astonishing and deeply moving book is an edited version of the exchanges that took place on The WELL in the months leading up to the death of Mandel. It traces the way an innocuous health topic morphed into a dramatic chronicle of terminal illness and the complicated and emotional issues that surrounded it. A cast of articulate and savvy participants offer their advice and love to Mandel, supporting both him and each other as the trauma unfolds. At the center of their back-and-forth is Mandel himself, in a voice that is irascible, intelligent, never sentimental, and, above all, determined to stay in the conversation to the end.
With an introduction by Paper editor Kim Hastreiter, who followed the exchanges on The WELL as they happened and was so moved that she printed and filed away a copy, @heaven opens a window onto the way the Internet functioned in its earliest days. In contrast to the trolling and take-downs of today's online discourse, this electronic chronicle of a death foretold reminds us of the values of kinship and community that the Internet's early pioneers tried to instill in a system that went on to take over the world.
In the early chat rooms of one such gathering, soon-to-become-famous as The WELL, a Stanford futurist named Tom Mandel creates a new conference. In a topic headed "Local Bug Report" he asks for advice from fellow online participants about how he might shake off a persistent hacking cough. A few weeks into the conversation it emerges that Mandel's illness is something serious. Within six months he is dead.
This astonishing and deeply moving book is an edited version of the exchanges that took place on The WELL in the months leading up to the death of Mandel. It traces the way an innocuous health topic morphed into a dramatic chronicle of terminal illness and the complicated and emotional issues that surrounded it. A cast of articulate and savvy participants offer their advice and love to Mandel, supporting both him and each other as the trauma unfolds. At the center of their back-and-forth is Mandel himself, in a voice that is irascible, intelligent, never sentimental, and, above all, determined to stay in the conversation to the end.
With an introduction by Paper editor Kim Hastreiter, who followed the exchanges on The WELL as they happened and was so moved that she printed and filed away a copy, @heaven opens a window onto the way the Internet functioned in its earliest days. In contrast to the trolling and take-downs of today's online discourse, this electronic chronicle of a death foretold reminds us of the values of kinship and community that the Internet's early pioneers tried to instill in a system that went on to take over the world.
Product Details
BN ID: | 2940151449687 |
---|---|
Publisher: | OR Books |
Publication date: | 05/14/2015 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | NOOK Book |
Pages: | 250 |
File size: | 458 KB |
About the Author
Kim Hastreiter is co-editor of the independent New York fashion magazine, Paper. Via her Macintosh SE 30 (which, as a keepsake, still occupies a corner of her office desk) she was a “lurker” on The WELL throughout the early 1990s. She was recently profiled in the New York Times.
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
An impassioned argument by a young Mexican American woman for the abolition of Immigration and ...
An impassioned argument by a young Mexican American woman for the abolition of Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) Abuses in detention centers. Detention of handicapped children. The silencing of activists. Each week, another attack on immigrant rights comes to light. ...
From his name to his college transcript to his literary style, Nathanael West was self-invented. ...
From his name to his college transcript to his literary style, Nathanael West was self-invented.
Born Nathan Weinstein, the author of the classics Miss Lonelyhearts (1933) and The Day of the Locust (1939) was an uncompromising artist obsessed with writing ...
From Cairo to cyberspace, from Main Street to Wall Street, today's social movements have a ...
From Cairo to cyberspace, from Main Street to Wall Street, today's social movements have a
creative new edge that's blurring the boundaries between artist and activist, hacker and dreamer. But the principles that make for successful creative action rarely get ...
Elegant and incendiary. Naomi Klein. Beautiful Trouble brings together dozens of seasoned artists and activists ...
Elegant and incendiary. Naomi Klein. Beautiful Trouble brings together dozens of seasoned artists and activists
from around the world to distill their best practices into a toolbox for creative action. Sophisticated enough for veteran activists, accessible enough for newbies, this ...
Simon Critchley first encountered David Bowie in the early seventies, when the singer appeared on
Britain’s most-watched music show, Top of the Pops. His performance of “Starman” mesmerized Critchley: it was “so sexual, so knowing, so strange.” Two days later ...
300 years after it was first published, Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe remains hugely influential and ...
300 years after it was first published, Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe remains hugely influential and
hotly debated. Since its initial release in 1719, discussions have surrounded the novel's depiction of individual solitude and work, colonial and racial relations, and mankind's ...
Part tirade, part confessional from the celebrated Rolling Stone journalist, Hate Inc. reveals that what ...
Part tirade, part confessional from the celebrated Rolling Stone journalist, Hate Inc. reveals that what
most people think of as the news is, in fact, a twisted wing of the entertainment business In this characteristically turbocharged new book, celebrated Rolling ...
After reading Jason Schwartz, it's difficult to talk about any other writer's originality or unique ...
After reading Jason Schwartz, it's difficult to talk about any other writer's originality or unique
relation to the language. John the Posthumous is a work of astounding power and distinction, beautifully strange, masterful. -Sam Lipsyte[Schwartz] is complete, as genius agonizingly ...