Feed

Paperback, 308 pages

English language

Published Sept. 23, 2002

ISBN:
978-0-7636-2259-6
Copied ISBN!
Goodreads:
169756

View on Inventaire

4 stars (28 reviews)

For Titus and his friends, it started out like any ordinary trip to the moon—a chance to party during spring break and play with some stupid low-grav at the Ricochet Lounge. But that was before the crazy hacker caused all their feeds to malfunction, sending them to the hospital to lie around with nothing inside their heads for days. And it was before Titus met Violet, a beautiful, brainy teenage girl who has decided to fight the feed and its omnipresent ability to categorize human thoughts and desires. Following in the footsteps of George Orwell, Anthony Burgess, and Kurt Vonnegut Jr., National Book Award winner M. T. Anderson creates a not-so-brave new world—and a smart, savage satire ushering us into an imagined future that veers unnervingly close to the here and now.

29 editions

Review of 'Feed' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Let's say 4.5 stars. This was so beautifully captured, and so apt in its straining teenage susceptability to consumerism. I’d give it a 5, except for a creeping unease with the author’s fascination with destroying women’s bodies. (cf. the very different and also very good The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing. In both cases there are valid plot reasons for the violent actions, but… there’s got to be another way to effectively present these themes.)

Review of 'Feed' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

This dystopian novel isn't about coming back after the crisis, it's about the spiral down to the crash. You get the point of view of a teenager, consumed with normal teenage matters, in a world where something analogous to Internet advertising is implanted in your brain and tied into your body. Corporations run everything. I found the slang very immersive, and the story bleak.

Review of 'Feed' on 'LibraryThing'

No rating

What a disturbing book. It portrays teens in a future where consumerism run amok has destroyed the planet and all human decency. Computers have been implanted into people's bodies so that they can have a continuous feed of news, gossip, product information, advertising, and generally distracting trivia. A kid meets a girl who is different; she wants to be normal, but she also wants poetry and nature and life, all of which are incompatible with people's one and only purpose: consuming. Soon you realize that the constant attention to things and gossip has not only brought out the worst in teens, they are merely acting on the decisions adults have made. Among the creepy things - meat is raised artificially, great giant, dripping walls of it. School (TM) has been privatized and is pretty much where we're headed only worse..People are getting lesions because of the toxicity of their world. …

Review of 'Feed' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I'm trying to get a fix on why like I didn't, you know, like this thing, this book too much. Everyone says its meg brag but it just felt maybe a little disconnected like the time when I went a whole day without checking facebook? And then when I checked nothing had really happened and nobody had messaged me and I was going all like "What nobody messaged me" and then my friends were all like "What we would've messaged you but you didn't message us" and everyone was wondering why I was going all mal over it...

When my ex-wife and I first started dating, she made me dinner one night using her grandmother's macaroni and cheese recipe. The recipe called for 3 tablespoons of flour; my ex-wife put in 3 cups. This book is kind of like that: It has the right ingredients, but not in the right …

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Subjects

  • Fiction
  • Sci-fi