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James Gleick is a well-known author, journalist, and essayist, whose writings are generally musings on technology and science, and the people who have contributed to these fields.

His books include:

  • Chaos: Making a New Science (Viking Penguin, 1987)
  • Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman (Pantheon, 1992)
  • Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything (Pantheon, 1999)
  • What Just Happened: A Chronicle from the Electronic Frontier (Pantheon, 2002)
  • Isaac Newton (Pantheon, 2003).

They have been translated into more than twenty languages. Three of his books have been Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalists.

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Faster: The Acceleration of Practically Everything - Site illuminating and extending James Gleick's new book.

James Gleick - The author's own, self-maintained (and therefore official) website, with information on his books and online texts on a variety of science- and technology-related subjects. Mainly this site is home for a few articles that may be of interest to the online community. Operating as we are in real time, I get to add postscripts here and there, with the advantage of hindsight.
Meta Description: [ James Gleick, the author and journalist, posts some of his current writing: essays on technology and the future and excerpts from his best-sellers 'Chaos' and 'Genius.' ]

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. "It is the trajectory toward which all other trajectories converge." James Gleick Set to original music by Whisper of ...

 

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