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OUT NOW: The new book by Sunday Times bestselling author, Emma Gannon I love Emma Gannon's wise and refreshing perspective on work, and more broadly on the challenges of building a meaningful life in an era of distraction, overwhelm and uncertainty. - Oliver Burkeman, New York Times Bestselling author of Four Thousand Weeks__________Millennials might have grown up online but now they want to log off. And it's not just millennials. A year of lockdowns, Zoom meetings and reduced physical contact has made us more dependent on the internet than ever before - but has it lost its humanity? Our focus on community and real connection has been sent off-course and we're becoming more aware of how the algorithm manipulates us and how our data has made us a product to be sold. So, where do we go from here and how can we get back on track? (Dis)connected examines these topics and offers tangible tips and advice for those of us who might feel a little lost right now and want to find themselves again.__________Emma Gannon is a cordial and provocative spirit. Read her, listen to her, explore her world and the world at large through her eyes. Hers is a journey well worth taking. - Julia Cameron, New York Times Bestselling author of The Artist's Way
The handbook you need to slay your own self-sabotage.
The debut novel from the Sunday Times bestselling author, Emma Gannon.'Thoughtful, searching, funny, and (most importantly) honest' Elizabeth Gilbert'Relatable and incredibly real' Louise O'Neill'It'll give a voice to countless women' Marian Keyes'Utterly distinctive' Emma Jane Unsworth
The Multi-Hyphen Method is an essential new business book for the digital age.
Emma Gannon was born in 1989, the year the World Wide Web was conceived, so she s literally grown up alongside the Internet. There ve been late night chat room experiments, sexting from a Nokia and dubious webcam exchanges. And let s not forget catfishing, MSN, digital friendships and #feminism. She was basically social networking way before it was a thing and she s even made a successful career from it. Ctrl Alt Delete is Emma s painfully funny and timely memoir, in which she aims to bring a little hope to anybody who has played out a significant part of their life online. Her confessions, revelations and honesty may even make you log off social media (at least for an hour).
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