Jason Farman is an award-winning author and media studies scholar at the University of Maryland. His work has appeared or been cited in the Atlantic, Atlas Obscura, and the New York Times. He lives near Washington, DC.
In our frantic, overstimulated era, is it at all possible to be unruffled by red lights, buffering icons or the long lines at the DMV? Mr. Farman thinks so. -Emily Bobrow, Wall Street Journal [Farman's] account of wait times is certainly exhaustive, running the gamut of history, from Japanese smartphone messaging apps back to Aboriginal message sticks from 50,000 years ago. The book's longueurs, its digressions, and his pernickety academical style pale beside his main point, very well expressed, that 'the meaning of life isn't deferred until that thing we hope for arrives; instead, in the moment of waiting, meaning is located in our ability to recognise the ways that such hopes define us.' -Simon Ings, The Daily Telegraph Farman proposes a radical shift of viewing time not as individual but as collective, which is inherently a radical act of empathy - the willingness to accept another's time as just as valuable as our own. -Maria Popova, Brain Pickings Delayed Response is an original addition to the growing genre of books that want us to be more conscious of our relationships, collectively and individually, with technology. Farman's novel contribution is that he makes this case by way of an arguement for greater awareness of the passage of time itself. -Alex Tighe, Australian Book Review One of the most interesting and resonant explorations of contemporary media culture that I've read. Farman's wide-ranging, lively storytelling makes the book consistently engaging, and his argument for waiting as humanistic good is truly inspired. -William Powers, author of New York Times bestseller Hamlet's BlackBerry Jason Farman's timely and entertaining account explores the meaning of waiting and makes a compelling case that we should appreciate the shrinking space between sending and receiving messages. In an era of instant global communication, this book has arrived not a moment too soon. -Tom Standage, Deputy Editor, The Economist