Bookbot

Jarett Kobek

    The Future Won't Be Long
    I Hate the Internet
    Only Americans Burn in Hell
    Motor Spirit: The Long Hunt for the Zodiac
    ATTA
    • It’s 1969. Evil lurks in California.From a Napa County hippie child murder to Haight Street gang bangs to methamphetamine psychosis to the killing of Sharon Tate.Here and now, in this place and this time, it’s all gone wrong.And there’s something else, too.Zodiac.

      Motor Spirit: The Long Hunt for the Zodiac2022
      4,1
    • Only Americans Burn in Hell

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      A despairingly hilarious satire of the modern world, from #MeToo to Trump, by the bestselling author of I Hate the Internet.

      Only Americans Burn in Hell2020
      3,8
    • An inspired evocation of the last days of the underground empire, before the fall Chris Kraus

      The Future Won't Be Long2018
      3,6
    • I Hate the Internet

      A Novel

      • 290pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      What if you told the truth and the whole world heard you? What if you lived in a country swamped with Internet outrage? What if you were a woman in a society that hated women? Set in the San Francisco of 2013, I Hate the Internet offers a hilarious and obscene portrayal of life amongst the victims of the digital boom. As billions of tweets fuel the city’s gentrification and the human wreckage piles up, a group of friends suffers the consequences of being useless in a new world that despises the pointless and unprofitable. In this, his first full-length novel, Jarett Kobek tackles the pressing questions of our moment. Why do we applaud the enrichment of CEOs at the expense of the weak and the powerless? Why are we giving away our intellectual property? Why is activism in the 21st Century nothing more than a series of morality lectures typed into devices built by slaves? Here, at last, comes an explanation of the Internet in the crudest possible terms.

      I Hate the Internet2016
      3,7
    • ATTA

      • 199pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      A disorienting fictionalized portrayal of 9/11 mastermind Mohamed Atta and the meaning of madness.

      ATTA2011
      4,2