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  Melanie McGrath - Hard, Soft and Wet - Review
posted by Markus on Monday April 02, @05:43AM ( Printer Friendly Version.| Email this article)
Computing  Melanie McGrath – Hard, Soft and Wet - Review
Markus reviews Hard, Soft and Wet by Melanie McGrath, and finds it to be an inoffensive, but non-essential auto-biographical story describing her experiences with the online world.
"The title, pornographic as it sounds (or is that only me?), refers to the Hardware, Software, and Wetware (ie humans – what a limited definition) that today’s world of IT requires. Not sure she really 'got it', though."

Read the full review on Diversebooks


Where to start?
Firstly, a few misconceptions from the front cover:
- The title, pornographic as it sounds (or is that only me?), refers to the Hardware, Software, and Wetware (ie humans – what a limited definition) that today’s world of IT requires. Not sure she really ‘got it’, though.
- The subtitle/tag line ( The Digital Generation Comes of Age ) is a load of rubbish, and most likely the result of a brainwave by some marketing droid. The story is about Melanie’s love affair, and eventual disillusionment with the online world.

So we’re following Melanie’s discovery of the online world during a trip to a friend in the US. From thereon we follow her on her travels, always chasing understanding of the ‘new world’, all things technological and online; and, most likely the eternal question of youth and future (the future, as well as hers specifically). The connection between those things remains tenous, though.

On the way we find love affairs, technical problems, all the people she meets (isn’t it great to be a journalist and have access to all the famous and special places?). It’s also telling to see how quickly all things go back to meeting IRL, in the flesh – she uses the web to make contact with her subjects, and visits or meets up.

Initially she keeps going back and forth between the UK (where she lives – East London to be precise) and the US, where her friend Nancy is to be found, but in the last third of the book things accelerate, and she visits Ireland, Germany, Czech, Russia, the far East…
And we learn about political views (not hers), the youth of today (not her, either), music and media (just a little), and plenty of name dropping. Did I mention that she is a journalist already?

Melanie McGrath is a journalist and writer living in London. To date she has three novels to her name (all of them auto-biographical to some degree), and some articles in newspapers. There must be more than her website shows, but, seeing how web-savvy she is, it is perfectly possible that things are a bit out of date…

Overall this is not a bad book, just not a very relevant or essential one. It is rarely boring or overly long, but it doesn’t capture you, it doesn’t hold your interest, and, at least for me, didn’t provide any real information or entertainment; and takes itself entirely too serious.
Avoid unless seriously bored, there’s so much better stuff out there on the topic. If you’re interested in travel/technological discovery then I recommend you read Bruce Sterling’s ‘Holy Fire, which shows how such stories can be done.

Title: Hard, Soft and Wet
Subtitle: The Digital Generation Comes of Age
Author: Melanie McGrath
Reviewer: Markus
Reviewer URL: http://skating.thierstein.net
Publisher: Flamingo, HarperCollins
Publication Date: 1998
Review Date: 2 February 2007
ISBN: 0006548490
Price: very cheap on the Interweb, these days
Pages: 291
Format: Paperback
Topic: Technology
Topic: Society

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