A Deadly Wandering: A Tale of Tragedy and Redemption in the Age of Attention
From Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Matt Richtel, a brilliant, narrative-driven exploration of technology's vast influence on the human mind and society, dramatically-told through the lens of a tragic "texting-while-driving" car crash that claimed the lives of two rocket scientists in 2006.
In this ambitious, compelling, and beautifully written book, Matt Richtel, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for the New York Times, examines the impact of technology on our lives through the story of Utah college student Reggie Shaw, who killed two scientists while texting and driving. Richtel follows Reggie through the tragedy, the police investigation, his prosecution, and ultimately, his redemption.
In the wake of his experience, Reggie has become a leading advocate against "distracted driving." Richtel interweaves Reggie's story with cutting-edge scientific findings regarding human attention and the impact of technology on our brains, proposing solid, practical, and actionable solutions to help manage this crisis individually and as a society.
A propulsive read filled with fascinating, accessible detail, riveting narrative tension, and emotional depth, A Deadly Wandering explores one of the biggest questions of our time--what is all of our technology doing to us?--and provides unsettling and important answers and information we all need.
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Become an affiliateMatt Richtel is a reporter at the New York Times. He received the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for a series of articles about distracted driving that he expanded into his first nonfiction book, A Deadly Wandering, a New York Times bestseller. His second nonfiction book, An Elegant Defense, on the human immune system, was a national bestseller and chosen by Bill Gates for his annual Summer Reading List. Richtel has appeared on NPR's Fresh Air, CBS This Morning, PBS NewsHour, and other major media outlets. He lives in San Francisco, California.
"Matt Richtel's riveting book is narrative nonfiction at its finest. ... This book should be placed in every school and legislative chamber in the country."--Jon Huntsman, former governor of Utah
"Illuminates the perils of information overload... Raises fascinating and troubling issues about the cognitive impact of our technology."--Publishers Weekly
"Each page is... irresistible. ... A richly detailed and compellingly readable exploration of the 'clash' between our brains and the electronic devices that, for many of us, have become essential to 'every facet of life.'"--Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Keen and elegantly raw. ... Not just a morality tale but a probe sent into the world of technology. ... Richtel draws all the characters with a fine brush, a delicacy that treats misery both respectfully and front-on."--Christian Science Monitor (One of the 10 Best Nonfiction Books of the Year)
"A portrait of our digital age that will deeply frighten you and cause you to reevaluate many common aspects of your 'connected' life. ... An extraordinarily important book that everyone--and I mean everyone--should read."--Douglas Preston, co-author of The Monster of Florence
"A masterpiece of reporting, insight, and empathy. ... A beautiful, cautionary tale that reads like a novel, and that we disregard at our risk."--Robert Kurson, author of Shadow Divers
"A Deadly Wandering is more than a page-turner. It's a book that can save lives."--Nicholas Carr, author of The Shallows
"This book does that most amazing of feats: it makes cutting-edge scientific research feel relevant to the choices we make every time we get in a car, sit at a desk, or talk to our friends and family."--Charles Duhigg, author of The Power of Habit
"A gripping book. ... This is human drama and the latest knowledge about obsessive technology woven together in memorable style."--Ralph Nader, author of Unsafe at Any Speed
"A compelling, highly emotional, and profoundly important story."--Kirkus Reviews (Starred; a Best Book of the Year)
Intensely gripping, compelling, and sobering... A Deadly Wandering gives the potentially lethal risks of the digital age a very human face -- one which we can, if we're honest, readily see in the mirror."--Winnipeg Free Press (A Best Book of the Year)
"Exhaustively researched. ... Richtel brings a novelist's knack for unspooling narrative conflict to bear on Shaw's real-life drama."--San Francisco Chronicle (A Best Book of the Year)
"Richtel's compassionate and persuasive book deserves a spot next to Fast Food Nation and To Kill a Mockingbird in America's high school curriculums. To say it may save lives is self-evident."--New York Times Book Review (Editor's Choice)
"Fabulously well-researched and brilliantly told. ... Moving and interesting."--Paula Poundstone