Quantum Feelings, Inc.

20,10 €
(inkl. MwSt.)
Versandkostenfrei in DE
Print on Demand. Lieferbar innerhalb von 7 bis 10 Tagen

Artikelbeschreibung

The pills work. That's the problem.NeuroEase can stabilize a panicking teenager in forty-five minutes. It's FDA-approved, federally funded, and scaling fast. What it can't do is explain why an entire generation is anxious-or help them find their way back to themselves.Four MIT graduates have spent a decade approaching the youth anxiety question from different angles: a startup founder who built the pill, a psychologist who won't prescribe it, a professor designing nature-based alternatives the insurance system doesn't know how to reimburse, and a journalist whose platform is becoming the story she's trying to cover.As federal funding shifts and institutional trust collapses, their separate efforts begin to converge-not neatly, and not without cost. Their innovations are messy, human, evoking the hopepunk spirit of Kim Stanley Robinson's The Ministry for the Future - grounded in the possible, not the perfect.This is a story about the people doing the work: a warm, diverse ensemble of Millennials navigating ambition, connection, and identity as personal journeys against a backdrop of America's broken public health system. Think Becky Chambers' warmth - where identity is lived rather than debated.What readers are saying:"One of the smartest and most timely novels I've read in years." - Amazon reviewer"Brainy, romantic and hopeful - just the antidote I need." - Verified reader"Hopepunk: the genre I didn't know I was missing." - Verified reader"No one is a villain. Each character sincerely wants to help - and their conflict reflects the ethical dilemmas we're all navigating." - Goodreads reviewer"The proposed solution actually seems viable. It gives me hope there are other options besides over-medicating this anxious generation." - Verified reader
Mehr von Johnson, Robin

Bewertungen

Die Bewertungen werden vor ihrer Veröffentlichung nicht auf ihre Echtheit überprüft. Sie können daher auch von Verbrauchern stammen, die die bewerteten Produkte tatsächlich gar nicht erworben/genutzt haben.