
How We Disappear: A Personal History of Information
Author(s): Thomas S. Mullaney (Author)
- Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
- Publication Date: June 23, 2026
- Language: English
- Print length: 240 pages
- ISBN-10: 1324020784
- ISBN-13: 9781324020783
Book Description
A brilliant foray into the nature of information, of history, and of making meaning in the face of death and decay.
When world-renowned scholar Thomas S. Mullaney “lost” both his parents, he began thinking of how information―all the stuff that makes us, that we make, and that we leave behind―ultimately disappears. The information that makes up our lives, from mundane official documents, poignant family photos, and sentimental artifacts to the cues embodied in our genes, both defines us, and inevitably decays, no matter the medium. Everything that we put “in formation” eventually collapses into randomness. Never is this more evident than in the wake of a parent’s death. Yet from all these elusive, even evanescent, data points, history is written and a future is made.
How We Disappear is a wide-ranging examination of the micro and macro, toggling between storytelling from Mullaney’s own life and his reflection on the science of entropy and the nature and history of information. Lyrical and poignant, the book offers inspiring and eye-opening insight on the miracle of existence, and on what it means to forge meaning from a chaotic universe.
1 illustration
Editorial Reviews
Review
― Vauhini Vara, Pulitzer Prize-finalist author of Searches: Selfhood in the Digital Age and The Immortal King Rao
“From the personal to the cosmic, loss and disappearance give up their terrors as Thomas S. Mullaney ranges with encyclopedic erudition from fossils to tax returns, photographs, sonograms, language, digitization, and far more in an idiosyncratic history of technology that is also a history of History, its dreams and its errors.”
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“A stunning meditation on history, memory, and loss. Toggling between the history of information and the history of his father’s life, moving fluidly across the ‘archives of humankind,’ Thomas S. Mullaney speaks to us―in one breath―as historian, philosopher, and descendant, searching for meaning in the face of loss and the ‘will to keep on living.’”
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“A beautiful and profoundly moving meditation on memory, loss, and about what survives us―and what doesn’t. This is intellectual history at its most intimate: learned, lucid, and deeply personal.”
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“Unlike anything I’ve ever read, this book works through painful memories of personal loss as a metaphor for the inevitable tradeoff between communication and the loss of information. But what makes this book really special is Mullaney’s prose, taking the reader on an exhilarating journey of mental time travel across vast distances in time and space.”
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“A fascinating, eloquent study of humanity, what we leave behind, and the uncertain fate of what might endure after we are gone.”
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“Deeply moving… A fascinating tour of the unexpected traces of our passage through the world, and the persistent forces that erase them.”
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About the Author
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