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Feed by M. T. Anderson
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Interesting plot, but I had trouble getting past the dialogue. Warnings - Language ( )
  JMcCullum | Jan 3, 2010 |
An interesting near-future concept that sadly lacks in execution. The notion of a feed that lives inside your head and keeps you so connected to information that there's no longer a need to think for yourself - not about politics or health or personal taste - is a good one. It doesn't feel all that far off from a world constantly wired to the internet, where one needed learn things because one can always google them.

Unfortunately, this promising base is never really developed. There's very little story to speak of, and although I think what is there is meant to be powerful, it left me cold because I found every character unrelatable, frustrating, and one dimensional.

Worse, the world itself comes off as a caricature rather than a true critique or even satire. It's shallow, and the implications of the feed - and what it might mean for humanity - aren't really explored. There's a lot of telling - given to us by an alternately preachy and whiny girl - and very little showing. What is shown appears to be there primarily for shock value.

Oh, look how far our society has fallen/can fall/probably will fall!

I want some thoughtfulness with my dystopia. I want to see that the author has really thought his premise through and considered the consequences. And most of all, I want it to be explored via interesting, engaging characters and story. Sadly, Feed had neither. ( )
  Aerrin99 | Dec 29, 2009 |
The story made me picture what could happen in the future if technology continues to take over. Some language issues, sexual situations and the topic of death may not be suitable for all ages. ( )
  madphill | Dec 27, 2009 |
Holy wow, this was an awesome audiobook.

(Summary paraphrased from jacket copy) Titus is a teenager whose ability to read, write, and even think for himself has been almost completely obliterated by his "feed", a transmitter implanted directly into his brain. But then Titus meets Violet, a girl who cares about what's happening to the world and challenges everything Titus and his friends hold dear. A girl who decides to fight the feed.

So, besides being a completely awesome and intense and well-written book, this is one of the best audiobooks I've ever listened to. Narrator David Aaron Baker gives each character a distinct voice and he totally gets the cadence of teen speech. The production is great, too. There's a slight echo effect to indicate when characters are "chatting" each other (talking using the feed instead of their voice) and the story is periodically interrupted by commercials just like you're listening to the actual feed.

Highly HIGHLY recommended for high schoolers and adults. (Fair warning: there is a fair amount of foul language.) ( )
1 vote abbylibrarian | Dec 21, 2009 |
Like your sci-fi with a hefty dash of satire? Then this one is right up your alley.

No one reads anymore and School(TM) is all about learning how to use the feed more effectively. Commercials and internet are wired directly to your brain. Corporations monitor your every thought and desire and compile huge databases on your likes and interests, the better to sell you stuff. The feed also lets you chat--like a telepathic IM.

The story starts on the way to the moon, where Titus and his friends visit for spring break. In the midst of his friends' moronic fooling around, Titus feels vaguely lonely and dissatisfied, but doesn't really have the words to express how he is feeling. And then he sees Violet, a beautiful girl who is different from anyone else he knows. She actually fights the feed, in an effort to think for herself.

The scariest thing about Anderson's vision of the future? Our consumer culture and the state of technology is not really so far away.

Violet joins the group and they go to a club. While there, they are "hacked" by a protester and their feeds are disrupted. Everyone else recovers quickly, but Violet starts to experience random glitches as her feed hardware malfunctions. ( )
  mrsdwilliams | Dec 17, 2009 |
A book about futuristic earth when the population is a war and slowly deteriorating but they don't realize it because they are basically brainwashed by a computerized system called the Feed installed at birth. Lots of language which was really unnecessary, but a good story and I loved it as a book on tape because all the Feed segments were dramatized. ( )
  mmillet | Dec 14, 2009 |
I was really excited to read this book initially because the concept seemed interesting and complex. As I started reading the book, I realized I would most likely be disappointed. The novel approached its plot very artistically and it was very brief. I was hoping for something a little meatier and more thrilling. This novel had the opportunity to be great, but I'm afraid it fell short. ( )
  Awesomeness1 | Dec 12, 2009 |
Excellent book. Absolutely not what I expected. ( )
  bluesalamanders | Dec 5, 2009 |
Feed is a rare book. There are only a handful of books I've read that I can say have hit me in the gut. Brave New World would be one such book. Heart of Darkness would be another. In my view, Feed is in that league.

Feed is not an easy book to read. I don't mean that in the sense that the writing is dense or the plot difficult to follow. Feed is extremely readable in that respect. I mean it is a difficult pill to swallow. It is an unflinching examination of our consumer culture. It is an unapologetic evisceration of youth culture. A lot of people would dismiss Feed after reading those two lines as a mere political statement or an agenda-pusher. That would be a mistake. Feed is not a partisan book. It is not advocating a world-view. It is showing us a mirror without the rose-colored glasses we cling to, myself included.

We are getting dumber. We don't read. We don't think. We listen to the news we are spoonfed and still manage to ignore anything unpleasant. We are poisoning our environment and slowly killing ourselves. The internet is raising a generation that bring up meaningless facts but cannot provide a shred of context to them. Corporations tell kids what is cool and they embrace advertising propaganda without a second thought. We are self-centered and shallow and we project these as virtues to our children. These are all true statements. I'm not a doomsayer, and I would argue we are actively resisting these effects in many ways. I'm not a radical, and I would argue these problems are not as bad as they seem. I believe both of those things wholeheartedly. But a small part of me can't deny the painful truth of Feed: Our world is not as different from the hell Anderson paints as we would like to believe. I hate Anderson's portrayal of what our society will become. But try as I might, I can't give a single reason why he's wrong.

Feed is not for the faint of heart. It is brutally honest.

Now that that's out of the way, I wonder why this book isn't more popular. I can't help but compare it to the award winning Little Brother by Cory Doctorow. Little Brother was up for a Hugo this year. When Feed was written a few years ago, it was virtually ignored. Both are in the young adult category, so it wasn't an issue of audience. Don't get me wrong, I loved Little Brother. But after reading Feed, I can only view Little Brother as a very naive version of 1984. Little Brother argues that technology and youth will save us from ourselves. Feed does what all powerful dystopian fantasies should do: It argues we are hurtling toward our own destruction and nothing will save us, least of all youth or technology, which are a large part of the problem. Little Brother lacks a lot of its punch after reading Feed. ( )
  SendersName | Dec 1, 2009 |
(I originally wrote this review on April 11, 2003 for Amazon.)

Satire may soar over the heads of young readers:

Imagine instant-messaging your friends in your mind. Imagine all those obnoxious computer pop-up ads happening right in your brain. Imagine retailers knowing precisely what you've ever bought, your favorite color, your shoe size. Imagine liking it. This is the scary, weird world described in M.T. Anderson's "Feed". Titus and his friends are average middle-class American teenagers of the future. They take for granted the weird convergence of technology, corporate intervention, and mind-control they live with known as a feed. Enter Violet; a girl Titus meets on spring break, a girl who wants to 'fight the feed'.

There are important and compelling issues raised in this novel about advertising, privacy, conformity, individualism and technology. It's a book that demands discussion, explanation and consideration. Unfortunately, I think that much of it may be over the heads of its teenaged target audience. Readers who need things spelled out may be challenged by this book because significant aspects of the setting (and what a grim future it is) are implied, or only mentioned in passing. I think few teenagers will be satisfied with the ending. And fewer still will probably spend much time thinking about the issues in the story after they've put it down. It's too bad that the profanity and few mild references to sexual situations will keep this book out of most classrooms, because it's really a story that deserves to be discussed, especially by young adults.

I do recommend this book for advanced and thoughtful teen readers. Sci-fi fans in particular will enjoy it. Other readers should appreciate the accurate portrayal of teen dating, cliques, jealousies, insecurities and friendships. I hope the larger, more important themes of the book will be grasped as well.
  jbvm | Nov 26, 2009 |
This book blew me away...a complete surprise. I love cautionary tales that are simultaneously subtle and hysterical. Feed, however is also creepy and at times unnerving. M.T. Anderson's has provided his characters amazing, on-the-mark voices. I HIGHLY recommend the audio version as it's produced in a multi-media style that drives home many of the book's philosophies and visions. ( )
  jwcooper3 | Nov 15, 2009 |
The language is incredible. Will scare you to death! ( )
  LynnMK | Oct 24, 2009 |
While the idea of the 'feeds' into the brain raises questions parallel with societal issues of advertising/marketing and teens, Titus, the protagonist, never grows or develops as an adolescent while other around him do and are affected by their situation and circumstances. Prefer Anderson's 'Thirsty' ( )
  jaseD | Oct 13, 2009 |
I listened to this book on CD. At first the lingo and the feed ads really threw me. But I got absorbed in the story of Titus and Violet. They meet during a spring break trip to the moon, and bond after a hacker gives them a virus that effects their feed. Feeds are like a computer that is completely integrated into brain and body function. The world of the future has been virtually destroyed, materialism and consumerism are running rampant with advertisements being constantly pumped into people's brains, and schools are run by a corporate entity. Titus and his friends like to party and have fun. Violet is from a different socio-economic status and has an interest in trying to fight the feed. Unfortunately, she is not recovering well from the hack and her feed is malfunctioning, which in essence means she will die. The book explores the course of their relationship and Titus' growth to decide if he can defy his status quo. At times in the book he succeeds more than others. Anderson sucked me into this world and gave me a lot to think about. Plus I liked the catch phrase "what's doing?"
It also made me wonder how far off all this might really be when I look around and see people virtually attached to their phones. ( )
  ewyatt | Sep 22, 2009 |
I think this book might deserve more than the 3.5 stars I'm giving it. I had certain expectations for this book, and thought it was about fighting the feed, which they really did very little of. I thought I knew what the book was about, but I was wrong and a little bit disappointed. It was still interesting and fun to read, and I'd suggest it to many of my students. ( )
  4sarad | Aug 14, 2009 |
Not a book for adults, but perfect for 14 year-old boys who don't necessarily like to read "difficult" books. A book the average kid would actually like. ( )
  GeoffWyss | Aug 14, 2009 |
M.T. Anderson, who won the National Book Award for his book The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing set during the Revolutionary War, was ahead of his time with this novel, published before iPods were all the rage, and when cell phones were just becoming popular. In the not-so-distant future, teenage narrator Titus, like all of his peers, has a “feed,” an Internet/television hybrid that is directly hardwired into his brain, and corporations send constant messages through the information stream.

Full review:
http://www.twentybyjenny.com/teenBook... ( )
  20XJenny | Aug 9, 2009 |
Perfect and scary.. ( )
  JFDR | Jul 28, 2009 |
I finished M.T. Anderson’s excellent Feed on audio, an excellent work set in a near future where 73% of people have Feednet wired directly into their brains. Though impressively thought out with lots of details that most science fiction never bothers with, I personally connected more with the main characters relationship and their struggle with terminal illness. I’m also glad I listened to the audio book version of this. I think I would have gotten very frustrated reading the futuristic teenspeak on paper. Teens I know might speak like that if they were transported to this future. Hearing it rather than reading it I think was a godsend.

Full review at my blog: http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/fe... ( )
  KingRat | Jul 26, 2009 |
This book is set in the future but it seems like not much. In this future world, everyone is implanted with “feeds” in their brains. These feeds do a number of things to each individual. They bring a constant stream of media and advertising, instant information so people do not need to read or write, and the built in ability to have any purchases made be automatically deducted from a credit card account. Chatting is mostly done through the feeds so people rarely need to talk out loud. Basically, people are corporately controlled and don’t think for themselves. Violet, who did not have her feed put in until the age of seven is the only character in the story that is a “free-thinker” that questions authority. M.T. Anderson didn’t have to look much further than Google (and the way it caters it’s advertising to you through what you enter into your email), and online social networking sites to get ideas for this book. This book is excellent fodder for discussion about commercialism and intellectual freedom. It would be a great book to use in a high school classroom. ( )
  Heidi001 | Jul 24, 2009 |
M.T. Anderson paints an interesting if frightening picture of a futuristic society in which major corporations use mind control to sell more products at the expense of the natural environment and the human capacity for independent thought. A good read for a high school "issues" or ethics discussion. Along with commercialism, consumerism, enviromental and political issues, the book presents a scenario of deteriorating personal relationships and intellect in exchange for improved technology and a lifestyle of convenience. The language is awkward, at first, as it takes awhile to get used to the slang. It actually seemed that Titus, the main character, became more intelligible the longer he was with Violet, the free thinker. ( )
  miksmom | Jul 24, 2009 |
For generations, books and other forms of art have served to warn about the dangers of getting too comfortable with the status quo, not questioning authority and government, falling into apathy and giving up critical thinking in order to be manipulated because it’s easier and possibly more comfortable—and Feed fits right in to this literary canon. Feed takes place in a futuristic world where “feeds,” or computers, are implanted in people’s brains during infancy. Feeds were great at first because everyone was so smart—they could instantly look everything up in their heads. But, over time, the feeds input non-stop feedcasts, instant news, entertainment, and advertising from the corporations like Feedlink and American Feedware. Everybody knows that these corporations are controlling them through the feeds, but hey, they’re “gonna control everything whether you like it or not.” The corporations also know each person’s likes, dislikes, hopes, and dreams, and with this information are able to manipulate them into buying and doing things they previously do not know they need or want.

Titus and Violet are two teens who meet during spring break on a trip to the moon. Violet is unusual because she did not get a feed until age 7, and it wasn’t top of the line because her father couldn’t afford more. Violet tries to rebel in small ways against the commercialism and manipulations of the feed. Titus is quite comfortable with his feed. When an old man “touches” Violet, Titus, and his friends with a metal hand at a club, and their feed signals “jam,” Titus must confront the implications of the feed in his immediate future as his relationship with Violet develops. Her feed continues to malfunction after being jammed, but her underprivileged status in society precludes the help she needs to get better.

For high school students, Feed introduces the global issues and consequences of consumerism, commercialism, and the temptation to rely too much on technology to the detriment of developing into thinking, questioning, individuals who are willing to take responsibility for decisions—big and small. Appropriate for older students because the hope of a better future is buried under the depressing storyline, and the foul language. ( )
  tlwood | Jul 21, 2009 |
This is a very scary book about a future where people are fed all the information, mostly commercials, directly into their brains. It is fearful because it is not impossible to become a reality soon. It teaches a lot about what our world may become if we are not careful, or take everything for granted, or sit on the sides complacent with the status quo. Students should definitely read it, to realize the dangers modern day society and technology may bring about including a complete demise of the thinking abilities in humans. Young people may be intrigued by the futuristic vision of every day life, but hopefully will realize the price at which it comes. ( )
  Alina100 | Jul 18, 2009 |
Meg futuristic. Hard to get into the flow of the story at first. Language and use of slang may cause readers to yield, and could prove confusing. Great great book, however. Anderson has a superb imagination, without limits. Theme is a bit morbid though. ( )
  emma_mc | Jul 16, 2009 |
first line: "We went to the moon to have fun, but the moon turned out to completely suck."

This is a disturbing dystopian novel for young adults. Anderson's future is one in which nearly everyone gets computer implants in their brains, allowing for Internet "feeds." Mentally, they instant-message their friends, look up words or facts, receive barrages of advertisements, and visit trippy web sites (a just-as-taboo equivalent to doing drugs). While everyone with the "feed" has access to the same education/information, there are still professionals -- business executives, politicians, doctors -- but they all talk pretty much like surfer dudes. (Imagine President Palin. Or Doctor Dubya. Shudder-some, I know.) The planet has been so ravaged that people live in manufactured environments, suffer from open sores and hair loss, and...yeah, you get the point. ( )
  extrajoker | Jul 5, 2009 |
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