The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter
The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter book cover

The Revenge of Analog: Real Things and Why They Matter

Paperback – October 24, 2017

Price
$14.03
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
PublicAffairs
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1610398213
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.88 x 8.38 inches
Weight
9.5 ounces

Description

"No matter which side you're on in the debate over digital technology, there's something to cheer you in The Revenge of Analog ."― Scott Timberg , New York Times Book Review "Captivating...Sax provides an insightful and entertaining account of this phenomenon, creating a powerful counternarrative to the techno-utopian belief that we would live in an ever-improving, all-digital world."― Michiko Kakutani , New York Times "Here is a compulsively readable book after a Luddite's heart.... Sax isn't preaching a return to the pre-Industrial Age, but neither is he embracing the robot overlords. He thoughtfully, wisely, and honestly points out how analog experiences enhance digital creativity and how humans benefit from what both have to offer. Essential reading."― Booklist, Starred Review "A perky and well-illustrated... look at a discordantly retro cultural trend."― Kirkus Reviews "Sax's message is that digital technology has certainly made life easier, but the analog technologies of old can make life more rich and substantial. This book has a calming effect, telling readers, one analog page at a time, that tangible goods, in all their reassuring solidity, are back and are not going anywhere."― Publishers Weekly "The more advanced our digital technologies, the more we come to realize that reality rules. David Sax reassures us surviving members of team human that material existence is alive and well, and makes a compelling case for the reclamation of terra firma and all that comes with it."― Douglas Rushkoff, author of Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus "Hang on digital mavens, the real world ain't going anywhere. In The Revenge of Analog , David Sax shows the continued importance of the physical stuff to how we live and work today."― Richard Florida, author of Rise of the Creative Class "The better digital gets, the more important analog becomes. In this fun tour of modern culture, David Sax has collected hundreds of ways that an analog approach can improve our newest inventions. Sax's reporting is eye-opening and mind-changing."― Kevin Kelly, founding executive editor of Wired and author of The Inevitable "We all thought the digital age would be the end of analog media--and we were wrong. In this smart, funny, glorious book, David Sax explains why so many of us still crave the tactile, sensual experience of listening to music on vinyl records and taking notes with pencil and paper. Turn off your electronic devices, find a quiet place, and savor this remarkable book."― Dan Lyons, bestselling author of Disrupted "David Sax has written a brilliant cri de coeur about the way things used to be, should be, and, increasingly, are becoming once again. The Revenge of Analog reminds us that it wasn't so long ago that records were vinyl, laces were double knotted and the mailbox at the end of the driveway was lovingly banged up. It's a book that brings something even more rare than a perfect song at the perfect moment-hope."― Rich Cohen, cocreator of HBO's Vinyl and author of The Sun & The Moon & The Rolling Stones "A thoughtful look at the many ways in which analog has not been eliminated from the world but in many ways is still thriving...Sax's book reminds us that we live in an analog world. It is a good reminder that digital can only take us so far."― Tadas Viskanta , Yahoo! Finance David Sax is a writer, reporter, and speaker who specializes in business and culture. His previous book, The Revenge of Analog , was a #1 Washington Post bestseller, was selected as one of Michiko Kakutani's Top Ten books of 2016 for the New York Times , and has been translated into six languages. He is the author of Save the Deli , which won a James Beard award, and The Tastemakers . He lives in Toronto.

Features & Highlights

  • One of Michiko Kakutani's (
  • New York Times
  • ) top ten books of 2016
  • A funny thing happened on the way to the digital utopia. We've begun to fall back in love with the very analog goods and ideas the tech gurus insisted that we no longer needed. Businesses that once looked outdated, from film photography to brick-and-mortar retail, are now springing with new life. Notebooks, records, and stationery have become cool again. Behold the Revenge of Analog. David Sax has uncovered story after story of entrepreneurs, small business owners, and even big corporations who've found a market selling not apps or virtual solutions but real, tangible things. As e-books are supposedly remaking reading, independent bookstores have sprouted up across the country. As music allegedly migrates to the cloud, vinyl record sales have grown more than ten times over the past decade. Even the offices of tech giants like Google and Facebook increasingly rely on pen and paper to drive their brightest ideas. Sax's work reveals a deep truth about how humans shop, interact, and even think. Blending psychology and observant wit with first-rate reportage, Sax shows the limited appeal of the purely digital life-and the robust future of the real world outside it.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(127)
★★★★
25%
(106)
★★★
15%
(63)
★★
7%
(30)
23%
(96)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Fun read. Not what I expected.

If you're looking for inspiration to start a retro-themed business, this is chock full of success stories. If you're looking for some sort of neo-Luddite manifesto, or thought-provoking analysis of digital vs analog, you won't find it here. Very business oriented, and doesn't really discuss reasoning outside of marketing.

Interesting read, and pretty entertaining, but not what I was expecting.
10 people found this helpful
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THis book is fascinating!

I am actually not done yet, but this book grips you with the irony of analog vs digital and the ways analog is making a major comeback! You will be enlightened and intrigued and fascinated with the stories of the resurgence of such things as Film, record albums and paper. People around the world are looking to touch, feel, experience something different than the digital age, and are willing to pay for it! The author is investigative, insightful and just plain delightful to read. Wonderful book!
6 people found this helpful
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One of my favorite reads last year

Refreshing and timely, a strong encouragement to not fall headlong into the rush to technology that our (marketing) culture is pushing us all into. Was so good I gave out several copies to folks as Christmas presents. Highly recommended for those who enjoy real things and not just digital recreations of things...long live analog!
4 people found this helpful
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Still Relevant

An extremely fun read. David Sax is one of the most interesting journalists of the 21st century. Maybe some of the analog technology is arcane, but Sax can still make a case for its appeal. Thoroughly enjoyed learning more about the revival of many analog things and the failure of some of the digital promises!
1 people found this helpful
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Good read. A reminder that newer is not necessarily better.

Very well written. A nice look at a few examples of how we are wired,
1 people found this helpful
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Stories of Unlikely Success

Digital has not yet conquered all. In brick-and-mortar stores, in paper notepads, in vinyl records, in board games, in print books, in schools—real things you can touch, smell, hand to a friend, and walk into are making a comeback. Most of these hit their low points during the Great Recession of 2008 but have seen steady increases ever since.

Analog is even stubbornly holding on in high tech firms with executives who carry Moleskines for notetaking and who ban digital devices from their meetings, engineers who insist on white boards, and gathering spaces which offer crafts, table games, and bike repair shops.

David Sax takes a journalistic approach in this book, with each chapter dominated by his reporting of unlikely success stories from Europe and North America. Analysis is thin, however. Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows and Andy Crouch’s The Tech-Wise Family offer much more insight. With Sax we basically get the point after the first couple chapters.

While Sax is insistent that analog will not go away, he stops short of saying that all things digital are doomed. Eventually, he hints, people will figure out which solution works best for which situations. And analog may well end up as the minor partner. In the meantime, he celebrates the real and tangible rising back to life.
1 people found this helpful
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One Star

My copy was missing several pages.
1 people found this helpful
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Enjoyable and Hopeful But Not Skeptical Enough

By Bill Marsano. This absorbing book about technology and its discontents should be read just before you read Robin Sloan’s “Sourdough” (it’s also available from Amazon, and first-rate, too). These two books make an excellent counterpoint. As for “Revenge of analog,” it’s an enjoyable read in which author Sax discusses in detail his observation that certain analog things—film photography, for example, and vinyl LPs, paper notebooks (e.g., Moleskine notebooks, which are reproductions and not made by the originating firm) and board games—are making a comeback. Or seem to be. Why is this? Why the re-adoption of things we only yesterday readily junked for easier, cheaper and faster digital replacements? Sax points to several reasons: 1, analog sound is superior to digital and color film beats digital hands down. 2, technology is inhuman and alienating. 3, sometimes easy is TOO easy, and the more easily we can get things with push-button ease, the less likely we—or at least some of us--are to appreciate them. For example, much as I admire my Kindle, I use it now only on public transportation, never at home. I haven’t used my iPod in a year at least. (Of course, I’m a big of a fogy. I use fountain pens and pocket watches all the time but almost never use my cell phone—I have bemused contempt for the Cell Fool—a person who spends half his life with his face in his phone and his head up his ass.) On the other hand, for some of us there’s a rewarding kind of ‘ceremony’ in vinyl: select the disc, remove liner from sleeve, remove disc from sleeve, place disc (reverently) on spindle. (A still smaller group prefers a different ceremony—actually attending a concert. There are no easy answers here.) It’s Sax’s contention that analog-lovers are a fast-growing population, and to some extent he’s probably right. But he isn’t skeptical enough. For example, many people buy Moleskine notebooks merely because of their look of crative seriousness (backed by tales of illustrious former users Picasso, Hemingway and Bruce Chatwin). Others buy Shinola wristwatches as a form of virtue-signaling in support of old-time craftsmanship and American artisans) while ignorant of deception behind them: they’re grossly overpriced (starting at $550!); they’re nothing more than utterly ordinary garden-variety quartz-movement watches; they aren’t MADE in Detroit, only ASSEMBLED there from imported parts (although Sax breathlessly reports a triumphant breakthrough: now the STRAPS are locally made!) And Shinola is no scrappy little start-up company, either. It was founded by Tom Kartsotis, ex-CEO of the $3.5 billion Fossil brand. The New York Times called him a “midprice watch mogul looking to go luxury under the cover of charitable business practices.” No problem---that’s perfectly good capitalism. Just don’t kid yourself that it means anything other than (the Times again) “squeezing every retails penny” out of the brand. In sum, this is a good read but it really can’t be taken at face value, much as fogeys like me might wish otherwise. And Sax might be more convincing if he hadn’t in some cases been overtaken after going to press. Retail, for example, is still suffering vs. online sales; Amazon is not struggling; and per the Wall Street Journal a growing percentage of lps re-released on vinyl are fakes—not made from original master but from digital copies! Apart from all that relied too much on examples from self-consciously retro Toronto and people who would buy the collected works of Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass.—Bill Marsano is a writer and editor of fifth years’ experience And an old fogy.
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Love the book
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

great book!
1 people found this helpful