Tuesday
Apr152008
Reviews
Tuesday, April 15, 2008 at 5:33PM | The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| Douglas Rushkoff | ||||
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The American Council for Judaism Review of Nothing Sacred, 2003
Interesting review, from the perspective of the need to confront disaffection.
MediaUnderground Reviews Club Zero-G
A deeper reading of the graphic novel than usual. And yes, he's got it pretty right.
MediaUnderground Reviews Club Zero-G
A deeper reading of the graphic novel than usual. And yes, he's got it pretty right.
Nothing Sacred reviewed by Gwen Nowak, for Books in Canada, 2003
This most penetrating review of Nothing Sacred reveals the book's true intentions and Rushkoff's 'trickster' role.
An Iconoclast's Next Move, Jewish Week Book Review, 2003
One of institutional Judaism's more balanced accounts of Nothing Sacred.
Rushkoff's Bull reviewed by Christian House for London paper The Independent (2001)
"Douglas Rushkoff's second novel, Bull, succeeds by peppering the thriller structure with the kind of literary experimentalism currently in vogue with young, metropolitan American writers."
Exit Strategy reviewed by Anne Edwards of eBook Reviews Weekly, 2002
"This author knows his field and has incorporated it into a lively and interesting, though somewhat searing report of business practices as told by Jamie Cohen."
Exit Strategy (online) reviewed by Mary Feeney for The Hartford Courant, 2001
"How's this for a gamble? The author Douglas Rushkoff is forgoing a book deal on his latest novel and is betting people will go to his website and do what almost seems unthinkable: write footnotes for fun."
"Keeping Score with the Digital Elite" — An audience member reviews/reacts to Rushkoff's talk at a conference about Digital Media (2001)
"Rushkoff's message that day was simple...everyone in the audience needs to lighten up."
Playing the Future reviewed by Vanessa Domine for the Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies, 2000
"To those readers who want answers, the book may read as a curse rather than blessing. Either way, it's a thrilling ride."
Children of Chaos reviewed by Stuart Price of the London Telegraph (1997)
"Read this book; it's a damned good, perceptive and compelling antithesis to popular notions of 'bad technology.'"
Ecstasy Club reviewed by Randall Lyman for The Bay Guardian, 1997
"Ecstasy Club offers a new take on the cerebrating, philosophizing, and hallucinating in Rushkoff's first three books."
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