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DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Second Life

Amanda Hess

'Unexpected, funny, beautiful' Claire Dederer, author of Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma

Barcode 9781408718612
Hardback

Original price £14.05 - Original price £14.05
Original price
£14.05
£14.05 - £14.05
Current price £14.05

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Release Date: 08/05/2025

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Computing & The Internet
Label: Abacus
Language: English
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group

'Unexpected, funny, beautiful' Claire Dederer, author of Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma
A moving, wry and thought-provoking memoir about having a baby with a rare genetic disorder - and how the landscape of parenthood has been transformed by the internet

One of TIME Magazine's Most Anticipated Books of 2025 . One of LitHub's Most Anticipated Books of 2025.

'Acutely empathetic, thoroughly researched, funny, irreverent and moving' Observer

'What a book! Has the lyricism and intelligence of a literary masterpiece, and the urgency of a thriller' Marianne Levy, author of Don't Forget to Scream

'So interesting, astute and beautifully crafted. I loved it' Lucy Jones, author of Matrescence

In the summer of 2020, when Amanda Hess was pregnant for the first time, a routine ultrasound screening detected a mysterious abnormality in her baby. Without hesitation, she reached for her phone, looking for answers online. But rather than allaying her anxieties, her search unleashed a destabilizing onslaught of data and technology, and she was vulnerable - more than ever - to conspiracy, myth, judgement, commerce and obsession.

In Second Life, Hess tells her deeply personal story of a pregnancy that falls outside the fêted category of 'normal'. But this is also a story about all of us. For as she made her way through a bizarre digital world of pregnancy apps, prenatal genetic tests, gender reveal videos, rare disease Facebook groups, 'freebirth' influencers and hospital reality shows, Hess realised that ideas of eugenics, surveillance, ableism and hyper-individualism are being sold through shiny technologies to a new generation of parents.

At once funny, surreal and heartbreaking, Second Life asks compelling questions about how our most fundamental human experiences are fractured and reshaped by technology.