FEED by M.T. Anderson


Folks, it’s prime time for a good ole’ fashion movement. My call to arms is to elevate M.T. Anderson’s FEED to the literary level of eerily-possible, deeply-disturbing, and way-before-its-time. This book meg delivers the same brilliance of Jules Vern, H.G. Wells, George Orwell, and Aldous Huxley.


In a future world where internet connections feed directly into the consumer’s brain, thought is supplemented by advertising banners, and language has gone into a steep decline, a little love story unfolds. Titus, an average kid on a weekend trip to the moon, meets Violet, a brainy girl who has decided to try to fight the feed. Assaulted by a hacker who interrupts their connection, they struggle to understand what has happened to them – and to everyone around them.

In his National Book Award Finalist Feed, M. T. Anderson has created a not-so-brave new world – and a smart, savage satire that has captivated readers with its view of an imagined future that veers unnervingly close to the here and now.


Or, if you’re dead and that description doesn’t hook you, the opening line will:

“We went to the moon to have fun, but the moon turned out to completely suck.”

Titus’s voice perfectly captures a teenage boy navigating his first relationship while communicating in a world filled with personalized shopping and direct-to-consumers’-brain marketing. Every day we creep closer to this vision and Anderson takes an unblinking look at the consequences (and even a few advantages), but the heart of the story is the gripping characters.

3 comments

I actually lent it to one of the sr. English teachers at my school. She is going to use it for a literature circle as a choice along with Huxley and Orwell. So yay!

Good one, unit! An absolutely brilliant book. Love it. I recommend this one far and wide.

Yes, this is always a safe recommendation. There's nothing I don't like about FEED.

Post a Comment

Grid_spot theme adapted by Lia Keyes. Powered by Blogger.

Search

discover what the Muses get up to when they're not Musing

an ever-growing resource for writers

Popular Musings

Your Responses

Fellow Musers

Translate