"Rosenbaum offers a spirited and enjoyable defense of his version of love." —The Wall Street Journal
Now available for the first time in paperback: a stirring manifesto on love in the modern age . . .
In a work of ambition and brio, legendary journalist Ron Rosenbaum investigates the neuroscience of love, and argues that what we know as love is imperiled by quantification and algorithms, which distill our behavior into mathematical formulas, our personality into brain-chemical categories, and our curiosity into quiz questions. The very capacity that makes us human, Rosenbaum posits, is being taken over by numbers.
To save it, he turns to literature, discussing writing about love from a vast range of sources, including Tolstoy novellas, trailblazing Updike manuscripts, David Foster Wallace and Chrissie Hynde. Part of love’s essence is its mystery, says Rosenbaum, and when he eventually finds his own answer to the riddle of love — a Happy Ending! — he finds it in a completely unexpected place.
In Defense of Love is more than an examination of the intersection of love with literature and science. It is a celebration of the uncanny and the persistent, the sublime and the ridiculous: the inexorable power of love.