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The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood Paperback – Illustrated, March 6, 2012

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,446 ratings

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From the bestselling author of the acclaimed Chaos and Genius comes a thoughtful and provocative exploration of the big ideas of the modern era: Information, communication, and information theory. 
 
Acclaimed science writer James Gleick presents an eye-opening vision of how our relationship to information has transformed the very nature of human consciousness. A fascinating intellectual journey through the history of communication and information, from the language of Africa’s talking drums to the invention of written alphabets; from the electronic transmission of code to the origins of information theory, into the new information age and the current deluge of news, tweets, images, and blogs. Along the way, Gleick profiles key innovators, including Charles Babbage, Ada Lovelace, Samuel Morse, and Claude Shannon, and reveals how our understanding of information is transforming not only how we look at the world, but how we live.

New York Times Notable Book
Los Angeles Times and Cleveland Plain Dealer Best Book of the Year
Winner of the PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award 

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Magnificent…this elegant, insightful study reminds us that we have always been adrift in an incomprehensible universe.” –Los Angeles Times, Best Books of 2011

“Grand, lucid and awe-inspiring…information is about a lot more than what human beings have to say to each other. It’s the very stuff of reality, and never have its mysteries been offered up with more elegance or aplomb.” –
Salon, Best of 2011 

“With his ability to synthesize mounds of details and to tell rich stories, Gleick ably leads us on a journey from one form of communicating information to another.” –
Publishers Weekly, Top 100 Books of 2011

“Ambitious, illuminating and sexily theoretical.” –
New York Times 
 
“Gleick does what only the best science writers can do: take a subject of which most of us are only peripherally aware and put it at the center of the universe.” –
Time

"The Information
isn't just a natural history of a powerful idea; it embodies and transmits that idea, it is a vector for its memes . . . and it is a toolkit for disassembling the world. It is a book that vibrates with excitement." --Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing

“No author is better equipped for such a wide-ranging tour than Mr. Gleick. Some writers excel at crafting a historical narrative, others at elucidating esoteric theories, still others at humanizing scientists. Mr. Gleick is a master of all these skills.” —
The Wall Street Journal
 
“Extraordinary in its sweep . . . Gleick’s story is beautifully told, extensively sourced, and continually surprising.” —
The Boston Globe
 
“Audacious. . . . Like the best college courses: challenging but rewarding.” —
USA Today
 
 “Challenging and important. . . . This intellectual history is intoxicating—thanks to Gleick’s clear mind, magpie-styled research and explanatory verve.” —
The Plain Dealer
 
“Gleick’s skill as an explicator of counterintuitive concepts makes the chapters on logic . . . brim with tension.” —
The Oregonian
 
The Information puts our modern ‘information revolution’ in context, helping us appreciate the many information revolutions that preceded and enable it. The internet certainly has changed things, but Gleick shows that it has changed only what has already changed many times before. . . . His enthusiam is contagious.” —New Scientist
 
“Impressively, reassuringly, Gleick’s substantial, dense book comes as close as anything of late to satiating [the] twin demand for knowledge and clarity.” —
The Irish Times
 
 “This is a work of rare penetration, a true history of ideas whose witty and determined treatment of its material brings clarity to a complex subject.” —
The Daily Telegraph (London)
 
“The page-turner you never knew you desperately wanted to read.” —
The Stranger
 
“To grasp what information truly means—to explain why it is shaping up as a unifying principle of science—Gleick has to embrace linguistics, logic, telecommunications, codes, computing, mathematics, philosophy, cosmology, quantum theory and genetics. . . . There are few writers who could accomplish this with such panache and authority. Gleick, whose 1987 work
Chaos helped to kickstart the era of modern popular science, is one.” —The Observer (London)
 
“Enlightening. . . . Engagingly assembled.” —
Nature
 
“ Mesmerizing. . . . As a celebration of human ingenuity,
The Information is a deeply hopeful book.” —Nicholas Carr, The Daily Beast
 
“An amazing erudite and yet highly readable account of why and how information plays such a central role in all our lives, Gleick’s
The Information is amongst the most profound books written about technology over the last few years.” —TechCrunch TV
 
“The web Gleick has woven is a rare one, a whole that envelops and exceeds its many parts, which certainly suits his topic. His contribution—too easily underrated in a work that synthesizes the ideas of others—lies in linking fields of science that aren’t connected in a formal sense. By the close of the book you cannot think of information as you might have before.” —Tim Wu,
Slate
 
“[Gleick] is wrestling with truly profound material, and so will the reader. This is not a book you will race through on a single plane trip. It is a slow, satisfying meal.” —David Shenk,
Columbia Journalism Review
 
“Gleick connects the dots that connect information to us, and there are many dots. . . . Here in one volume is the great story of the most important element at work in the world, and its story is well told. I had forgotten what a fantastic stylist Gleick is. It’s a joy to read him talking about anything.” —Kevin Kelly,
The Technium
 
“Packed with the rich history of human thought and communication through the ages.” —
PopMatters

About the Author

JAMES GLEICK is our leading chronicler of science and technology, and the author of Chaos and Genius, both nominated for the National Book Award, and Isaac Newton, which was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize. His books have been translated into thirty languages.

www.around.com


Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage; Illustrated edition (March 6, 2012)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 544 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1400096235
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1400096237
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.2 x 1.2 x 8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,446 ratings

About the author

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James Gleick
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James Gleick was born in New York and began his career in journalism, working as an editor and reporter for the New York Times. He covered science and technology there, chronicling the rise of the Internet as the Fast Forward columnist, and in 1993 founded an Internet startup company called The Pipeline. His books have been translated into more than twenty-five languages.

His home page is at http://around.com, and on Twitter he is @JamesGleick.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
1,446 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2016
Like anything Gleick writes (Chaos, Genius, Faster...) it is a non-fiction work that is hard to put down yet when you've read it you still want more!

This is an EXTREMELY broad and deep subject and its treatment as an ever-accelerating history --from unexpected complexities of African drums,
to the subtleties of Morse's and other codes, to the exponentially growing and overwhelming surfeit of ubiquitous information today-- serves as a
beautifully well-integrated, lucid and comprehensible foundation for the expertly crafted centerpiece: Claude Shannon's Theory of Information.

To tie together the totality of the technology that is most central to the 21st Century with the encoding of the double helix 21 million centuries ago
(an approximation, assuming RNA preceded DNA as Life's Secret Decoder Ring for about half of its history,) could take as many volumes as
Gibbon's, Wells' or Churchill's histories. Yet with the finesse of the ever-so-clever encoding that lets us put all nine of Ludwig's symphonies in
perfect precision on a 100mm-diameter piece of plastic or compress a 1+Gigabit/second 1080i streaming video into the 20 Mbit/s MPEG
transport stream on the Internet, Gleick manages to squeeze it all in and make it as much a "page-turner" as any Tom Clancy technothriller.

Shannon, the nominal intellectual Ulysses of this multifaceted Odyssey, would have celebrated his 100th on April 30 (2016,) but those in
the world of technology impacted by his work (to wit, EVERYTHING) --from Bell Labs, MIT, Boston Museum of Science and the IEEE and ACM
technical societies have planned to do it for him at dozens of universities and sites around the world. (And, perhaps, beyond: Voyagers I & II,
which have now left the Solar System, directly employ his 1948 "A Mathematical Theory of Communication" to let their electronic whispers
"phone home" over eight billion miles, the same mathematics of signals that lets us Skype with a friend in Tibet.

In a rare class with Turing and Feynman, according to his widow, Betty, (whom he met at Bell Labs a half century before,) had Alzheimer's not robbed him of his genius by the arrival of the new millennium he did so much to create, "He would have been bemused" by all this Magick,
(i.e., "sufficiently advanced technology.") From the Bells Labs and "Brass Rat" old-timers I've spoken with who knew him, I believe this one quiet man who wrote TWO PhD theses at MIT in 1940 --"A symbolic analysis of relay and switching circuits" and "An Algebra for Theoretical Genetics"--
would been bemused by AND have loved that this book that fully lives up to its subtitle: "The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood..."
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Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2012
Other reviewers have already gone into detail regarding the subject of the book, so I won't belabor that here. The author jumps from talking drums to the telegram to Charles Babbage to transistors, and Gleick is so good at drawing connections between these subjects that it never feels disjointed. It's a really masterful demonstration of how to weave biography, science, and history into one satisfying whole. As a reader with a technical background but no knowledge of the subject, I appreciated the level of rigor in the theoretical sections of the book, although I could see how it might alienate non-techie readers. My advice to them is: read this book anyway, and if it gets too dense, just skip ahead. It's too important, and too well-written, to miss entirely.

The book is divided into three sections, and each considers a different question. The "History" section asks: how does the way information is transmitted affect the way we think? One of Gleick's major theses here is that formal logic is a byproduct of written language, and he is very convincing on this point. Another very compelling section was the stuff about early computers, and the story of Babbage and Lady Ada. Gleick has a gift for making scientists relateable, and his enthusiasm for unconventional thinking is contagious.

The "Theory" section spells out Shannon's information theory, and brings some much-needed attention to the work of the most influential scientist you've never heard of. As I've said, this part can be a bit technical, which I appreciated, but if that's not your style, you can skim parts of this section without losing the major points. The description of Turing machines was also a highlight. Gleick's exuberant descriptions give the reader a sense of the excitement that the scientists themselves must have felt as they created these deceptively simple, staggeringly powerful theories.

Then... the "Flood." I'm a huge fan of Gleick's, but he really dropped the ball on this one. Ostensibly the last section of the book deals with the modern problem of data deluge, but it's a disappointment: there's little research or actual information, and plenty of conflicted hand-wringing. It almost seemed like it had been tacked on by another author. To some extent, this is okay -- data deluge isn't really what this book is meant to be about -- but given how big of a part this section plays in the marketing of the book, I would have preferred that Gleick just left it out entirely and shifted his focus to the book's much stronger sections.

The "Flood" section isn't bad, necessarily, just a disappointment compared to the quality and depth of the first two sections. Luckily, it doesn't detract much -- just don't expect more than a cursory look at data deluge from this particular book.

All in all, a very strong popular science book (which could just as reasonably be called a history book). If you're a pop science fan, you're probably familiar with some of the ideas and events described here, but only the very rare reader won't have something new and exciting to discover. It's mostly accessible to non-geeks, too; just plan on skimming the occasional section if you're hopelessly math-averse.
8 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Karl
5.0 out of 5 stars Great gift for CS students!
Reviewed in Germany on September 23, 2023
It's a really neat historical introduction to informatics and computer science. It doesn't really go into technical details (not a textbook), but outlines the development of some of the more fundamental ideas and lingo. Also just a fun read!
Marcelo Torres Llamas
5.0 out of 5 stars El mejor libro de los últimos 12 meses
Reviewed in Mexico on March 22, 2019
El arco narrativo del libro es cronológico, por lo que nos permite ir entendiendo cómo evolucionó el concepto de información, sus usos, sus detractores, sus promotores. Al ser también un tema inacabado creo que el autor acertadamente va cerrando el libro con sus posibles aplicaciones actuales, a nivel tecnología y biología, y deja la puerta abierta a pensar, escribir o reflexionar sobre el significado, como un acompañante natural de la información.
Douglas Teixeira
5.0 out of 5 stars História + Ciência
Reviewed in Brazil on December 26, 2017
Este é um dos melhores livros que li este ano, sem dúvida alguma! Acho que o James Gleick é um dos melhores autores da atualidade que escrevem sobre ciência para o público em geral. Nesse livro, o autor conta a história do que hoje chamamos de informação desde os primórdios. Desde os primórdios mesmo! O livro começa contando como tambores são usados em tribos da África para enviar mensagens importantes, conta como o alfabeto foi inventado, como o dicionário foi inventado, como o telégrafo, o telefone, e o computador foram invetados, explica o que é a chamada Teoria da Informação, e explica a evolução do conceito de "informação" até os dias de hoje. É um livro relativamente denso, mas excepcional.
MVE
5.0 out of 5 stars Estupendo libro.
Reviewed in Spain on November 8, 2018
Tema trascendental, escrito de forma a la vez rigurosa y muy amena, lleno de humor y erudición no-libresca. Absolutamente recomendable. Una parte importante es muy lenguaje-dependiente. En inglés es estupenda, pero no sé como tolerará la traducción.
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glenelgamanaplanacanalpanamaglenelg
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking
Reviewed in Australia on May 24, 2017
Need to keep putting it down to think about the implications of what has been written. Enjoyable well written treatment of the state of information theory.
One person found this helpful
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