Available Formats
Apocalypse How: Technology and the Threat of Disaster
By (Author) Oliver Letwin
Atlantic Books
Atlantic Books
30th March 2021
4th March 2021
Main
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Energy resources
Central / national / federal government policies
Technology: general issues
International relations
303.483
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 20mm
237g
'Entertaining and insightful' - Evening Standard
'One of the most important books of the year... Compelling' - Jamie Bartlett, Literary Review
'Timely' - New Statesman
As the world becomes better connected and we grow ever more dependent on technology, the risks to our infrastructure are multiplying. Whether it's a hostile state striking the national grid (like Russia did with Ukraine in 2016) or a freak solar storm, our systems have become so interlinked that if one part goes down the rest topple like dominoes.
In this groundbreaking book, former government minister Oliver Letwin looks ten years into the future and imagines a UK in which the national grid has collapsed. Reliant on the internet, automated electric cars, voice-over IP, GPS, and the internet of things, law and order would disintegrate. Taking us from high-level government meetings to elderly citizens waiting in vain for their carers, this book is a wake up call for why we should question our unshakeable faith in technology. But it's much more than that: Letwin uses his vast experience in government to outline how businesses and government should respond to catastrophic black swan events that seem distant and implausible - until they occur.
'Entertaining and insightful... The picture [Letwin] paints is bleak as he uses chapters that alternate between a fictional depiction of chaotic meltdown in the year 2037 and analysis of the real-life causes to show why such disaster could occur.' - Evening Standard
'One of the most important books of the year... compelling' - Jamie Bartlett, Literary Review
'Timely... it provides an insight into the mindsets that prevent politicians and civil servants from properly preparing for catastrophes.' - New Statesman
'A vivid and engaging account of how the risks inherent in our increasing dependence on technology could someday coalesce into a perfect storm with disastrous consequences. Apocalypse How reads like a dystopian thriller, but makes it clear that the dangers are very real.' - Martin Ford, New York Times bestselling author of The Rise of the Robots
Sir Oliver Letwin was MP for West Dorset from 1997 to 2019. He has been an academic at Cambridge and Princeton universities, an investment banker and a cabinet minister at the top of the UK Government. For six years he was a member of the National Security Council as the minister with responsibility for the UK's national resilience. He lives in West Dorset and London.