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Can You Feel Me Now?
Indigo
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Can You Feel Me Now?
By None
Current price: $12.99


By None
Can You Feel Me Now?
Current price: $12.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Can You Feel Me Now? is a sharp, moving, and darkly funny exploration of love, technology, and what happens when empathy itself becomes a service.
In a near future where feelings can be streamed, sold, stolen, or shared through devices like TransFeel™, DeepFeel™, and FullMerge™, the lines between intimacy and surveillance collapse. Therapists use empathy tech to fix marriages. Influencers turn menstruation into a hashtag challenge. Parents try to understand children they no longer recognise. And lovers discover truths they never wanted synced into their hearts.
But as the world pushes empathy past its limits, one question lingers:
What if the real connection we crave can't be downloaded, transmitted, or hacked — only stayed with?
Blending satire, tenderness, and speculative drama, Can You Feel Me Now? asks whether technology can really bring us closer, or whether presence without performance is the only empathy we ever needed.
Can You Feel Me Now? is a sharp, moving, and darkly funny exploration of love, technology, and what happens when empathy itself becomes a service.
In a near future where feelings can be streamed, sold, stolen, or shared through devices like TransFeel™, DeepFeel™, and FullMerge™, the lines between intimacy and surveillance collapse. Therapists use empathy tech to fix marriages. Influencers turn menstruation into a hashtag challenge. Parents try to understand children they no longer recognise. And lovers discover truths they never wanted synced into their hearts.
But as the world pushes empathy past its limits, one question lingers:
What if the real connection we crave can't be downloaded, transmitted, or hacked — only stayed with?
Blending satire, tenderness, and speculative drama, Can You Feel Me Now? asks whether technology can really bring us closer, or whether presence without performance is the only empathy we ever needed.
















