K A I R O S
Volume 2, Issue 1 Spring 1997
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ISSN 1521-2300
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Reviews
Wizards, Wired Women, Historians, Contrarians, Eulogizers, and Other Online Personae
Coordinated by John F. Barber
Fourteen reviewers take turns examining and reflecting on eleven papertext books which examine the history, present and future of the online world. An interlinked hypertextual spin collapses the boundaries between reviewer(s) and text(s) and invites the reader to join the conversation.

Hafner and Lyon's Where Wizards Stay Up Late The Origins of the Internet
John Barber

Cherney and Weise's Wired Women: Gender and New Realities in Cyberspace
Marcy Bauman

Stephen Doheny-Farina's The Wired Neighborhood
Nick Carbone

Steven Talbott's The Future Does Not Compute: Transcending the Machines in Our Midst
Joshua L. Farber

Hawisher, LeBlanc, Moran, and Selfe's Computers and the Teaching of Writing in American Higher Education, 1979-1994: A History
Susan Halter

Sherry Turkle's Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet
Cynthia Haynes

Geoffrey Nunberg's The Future of the Book
Lee Honeycutt

Joan Tornow's Link/Age: Composing in the Online Classroom
Joan Latchaw

Sven Birkerts' The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age
Susan Lewis-Wallace

Cherney and Weise's Wired Women: Gender and New Realities in Cyberspace
Robin A. Morris

Hawisher, LeBlanc, Moran, and Selfe's Computers and the Teaching of Writing in American Higher Education, 1979-1994: A History
Ted Nellen

Hawisher, LeBlanc, Moran, and Selfe's Computers and the Teaching of Writing in American Higher Education, 1979-1994: A History
Kip Strasma

Victor Vitanza's CyberReader
Bob Timm

Julie Bates Dock's The Press of Ideas: Readings for Writers on Print Culture and the Information Age
Bob Whipple

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