Review by Choice Review
Kirschenbaum (Univ. of Maryland, College Park) has produced an aptly titled, fascinating, and skillful study positioned at the intersection of literature and technology. This impressively researched history of word processing translated through a literary lens explores the personal habits, preferences, idiosyncrasies, and perspectives of both fans and foes. The author presents the views of those who have rejected computing altogether, along with those of such literary greats as Isaac Asimov, an early signpost for the direction that word processing would take as a literary tool. Featured among numerous writers is George R. R. Martin, who still uses WordStar (popular in the early 1980s but supplanted by WordPerfect) to compose his latest works. From the technology side, the reader is given an in-depth look at different programs, companies, and operating systems, as well as the significance of the WYSIWYG standard keyboard, various backup systems, and keystrokes. Kirschenbaum's own personal interest and anecdotes add to the historical charm, yet this work reads--as it should--like a completely new scholarly, historically important book. Extensive notes, index, and photos support this well-documented volume, which will fascinate anyone interested in the history of computing, innovation, technology, and literature. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels. --Susanne Markgren, Manhattan College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Kirschenbaum, an English professor at the University of Maryland, College Park, presents a well-researched, scholarly history of how early electronic typewriters, word processors, and microprocessor-based computers affected literary writers, the act of writing, and writers' plots, characters, literary devices, and stories from 1964 to 1984. The book includes numerous examples of how specific authors thought about, wrote about, experimented with, and used early word-processing machines. Authors whose word-processing experiences or philosophies are mentioned include Isaac Asimov, Stephen King, Haruki Murakami, Joyce Carol Oates, Anne Rice, and Amy Tan, among others. While some were stricken with concerns about perfectionism and automation, others (particularly in science fiction) embraced the ability to collaborate and the time-saving printing and revision functions. Kirschenbaum takes an academic approach to his subject, with lots of research into the mechanics of now-obsolete technology (IBM's Magnetic Tape Selectric Typewriter (MT/ST), WordStar, Kaypro, etc.). The book is more scholarly than entertaining, but will also appeal to lay readers interested in the impact of technology on culture. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review by Library Journal Review
In his newest book, Kirschenbaum (English, Univ. of Maryland; Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination) aligns literary art with information processing machines (computers) to create a history of word processing. To accomplish this goal, Kirschenbaum combines two lines of inquiry: the history of multigenre prose (mostly American) along with that writing as it was produced and affected by word processing. Covering such obsolete technologies as the TRS-80 Model I and the Zeke/Z-80 Zeke-II, the author acknowledges that the embrace of technology in writing happened across genres in surprising ways. There are notable examples of John Updike and his Wang processor; Stephen King also briefly relied on one, while Ralph Ellison used Wordstar and George R.R. Martin famously still uses it. These instances are also contextualized as signifiers of the culture's general adoption of personal computers in writing and the office environ. The program and the network changed the nature of work and the aesthetic of writing from the point of view of the author. These are a fraction of the larger cultural issues touched upon in Kirschenbaum's narrative. -VERDICT For readers interested in the history of the production of writing as well as those who appreciate the finer tech-related facts that have fallen out of popular memory.-Jesse A. Lambertson, Metamedia Management, LLC, -Washington, DC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A learned and lively study of the sometimes-uneasy fit between writing on a computer and writing generally. John Updike, some of whose garbageliterallyjust went up for auction, may have been the last major American author to leave a "vast paper trail, possibly the last of its kind," in the words of biographer Adam Begley. His successors leave, instead, an evanescent electronic trail. The effect on literary study is just beginning to be felt; enter Kirschenbaum (English/Univ. of Maryland; Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination, 2008, etc.). Though a full taxonomy of the stylistic changes wrought by the computer has yet to be published, Kirschenbaum does a good job of hinting at lines for future research. Moreover, his here-and-now study is useful in showing how word processing spread from the realm of science fiction into that of general literature, introduced by the likes of Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and especially Douglas Adams and slowly adopted by the mainstream. Even then, as Kirschenbaum shows, some writers who might have been expected to take to computers resisted. David Foster Wallace, to name one, preferred composing in longhand and then transcribing onto the computer; he also "deliberately eras[ed] rejected passages from his hard drive so as not to be tempted to restore them to the manuscript later on." Computer sleuthing nonetheless helped bring the posthumous Pale King into being, as it did some of the late work of Frank Herbert. Kirschenbaum observes that word processing as a literary subject comprises "a statistically exceptional form of writing that has accounted for only a narrow segment of the historical printing and publishing industry." This would seem obvious, given the newness of the gear, but the author deepens that account with cross-technological looks at typewriting (shades of William Burroughs) and other compositional mediaincluding tape, "the medium that initially defined word processing." Materiality, information, and absence: as Kirschenbaum rightly notes, literature is "different after word processing," and so is literary history. He makes a solid start in showing how. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.