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HOW TO SWITCH OFF FROM THE WORLD

Glenda Cooper

The Quiet Zone Stephen Kurczy Dey Street Books £20

Imagine a world where your life wasn’t disrupted by a constant ping of emails, you spoke to your partner rather than WhatsApping them, and your kids weren’t glued to TikTok. That’s the promise of the town of Green Bank, deep in the Appalachian Mountains of the United States. It’s a place where Wi-Fi and mobile phones are banned, and even microwaves and automatic flushing toilets are confined to restricted areas.

Green Bank, in West

Virginia, is home to the

National Radio

Astronomy

Observatory, where scientists search for the secrets of the universe. For a tenmile radius, all devices that emanate radio frequencies are banned in order not to disrupt the observatory’s telescopes.

This means that many who are sick of digital connectivity – or believe they are sick because of digital connectivity – flock there.

The American journalist Stephen Kurczy, who had resisted having a mobile phone for ten years, was drawn to a place that seemed to offer freedom from our hyper-connected lives. ‘It did not occur to me,’ he wrote, ‘that a community bathed in quiet could be anything but idyllic.’

But in the four years that he spent visiting there, he discovered that the Quiet Zone was far from quiet. In fact, nearly everyone in the town has Wi-Fi – even the man whose job it is to roam around town searching for infractions of the ban – and Green Bankers thought he was the odd one out not having a mobile. What Kurczy stumbled on instead was a place where people have things they want to keep quiet: international eavesdropping by the National Security Agency, a neo-Nazi headquarters, sex cults and unsolved murders, as well as Hunter ‘Patch’ Adams – the clown doctor made famous by the Robin Williams film. As one resident put it succinctly, the place is ‘a magnet for weirdos’.

The book unfolds gradually and at times can feel slow-moving and over-researched – rather like the town itself which is frequently deluged with journalists. The most gripping parts are the vivid descriptions of the ‘electro-sensitives’ who are convinced they feel ill when exposed to iPhones or smart meters – and Kurczy’s dogged pursuit of those involved in the National Alliance, a crumbling white supremacist organisation which made its headquarters there.

But Kurczy did not want his book to be a gawp at moonshiners and hillbillies: his aim was to see whether it’s possible for us to have a healthier relationship with technology if you restrict access to it.

There are no easy answers. If you want evidence that switching off completely from technology is desirable or even possible, you won’t find it in this book – although Kurczy supplies touching accounts of how a close-knit community can function offline.

He concludes that what we should find most worrying is not whether radio waves can damage our health, but the fact that extremists like the white supremacists he met no longer need a physical place like Green Bank to spread their messages of hate, now they have the internet. That, he concludes, is the real invisible pollution we should fear.

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2021-09-26T07:00:00.0000000Z

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