The iPhone between me and you

Imagine a life in the future devoid of human interaction, of everything from a friend’s embrace to the touch of a  cashier carefully placing change in the palm of your hand.

In Courtney Maum’s new novel, “Touch,” the future is now, and isolation that has grown from a screen-obsessed culture has given way to a new kind of marketplace, where the warmth of a hug is as much of a commodity as an Uber ride.

Maum described the setting of “Touch” in a phone interview as, “Four days into the future,” and said there’s good reason to believe in her predictions. She has made a career out of knowing what’s yet to come: She worked as a trend forecaster, looking ahead as far as 20 years to peer into what our inner desires will be, and what kind of products we will seek in response.  

In “Touch,” a tart and vibrant satire, Maum puts her knowledge to good use. The protagonist is also a trend forecaster, but Sloane Jacobsen (who foresaw the slick coolness of “swiping” across a smart phone screen) inhabits an eerily imaginable landscape where the spread of the digital, from phones to cars to kitchens, has turned the physical into a kind of fetish. 

Jacobsen’s husband, an intellectual rebel of the European Twitter-sphere, has coined himself a “neo-sensualist,” donning an anti-touch Zentai Suit (think Spider-man’s fully covering costume made from bright monotoned spandex). 

When the entire body is disguised, it offers the in-person equivalent of being anonymous online. 

Maum first stumbled upon the suits while working in Paris. 

“I was tasked with researching what kind of texture people would want out of eventual second-skin technology when the ozone was depleted.”

Members of the real Zentai community can vary from participants who meet in large groups, to couples who watch Netflix together in the suits. 

“The thing about trend forecasting is that instead of just stoping at ‘That’s so weird,’ you need to ask yourself, ‘Why? Why are the Japanese going to cat cafés? Why is Zentai an acceptable way of being?’ 

“People are tactile-y deficient,” she surmised.

“The book is devoted to the idea of outsourcing affection. The idea that people will actually start to pay for run-of-the-mill physical affection … I thought of professional huggers, hugging salons and hugging parties.” 

In 2016, as Maum was working on the manuscript, her agent showed her an article reporting on actual professional huggers. 

“I was so upset! I had really been staying offline for three years so as not to be influenced by real trends. I just wanted to follow what felt right for the book.”

Anyone who would like to be in touch with Maum, in the figurative and literal senses, can meet her at the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon’s annual book signing event on Friday, Aug. 4.

More than 30 authors, some local, are participating in this year’s book signing, which will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 4, at the library. Admission is $40 per person. A free signing for children’s book will be held that afternoon from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.

Six of the authors will be at dinners at private homes that evening. The dinners are $150 per person. To reserve a place, call the library at 860-364-5041.

The annual library used book sale follows on Saturday and Sunday. 

 

For more information, go to www.hotchkisslibrary.org.

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