Titus is a a typical teen. He lives with his parents and annoying younger brother, likes to hang out with his friends, and is always looking for something exciting to do. During Spring Break, he and his friends decide to go to the Moon. That’s right – the Moon. Titus lives in a technologically adv...
In M.T. Anderson's book, "Feed", the brain of nearly everyone in the world is directly linked to an Internet-like network of information, communication, and - most importantly - advertising. The world itself, that physical realm that our bodies inhabit, is hardly of any importance. What matters is...
Titus is a a typical teen. He lives with his parents and annoying younger brother, likes to hang out with his friends, and is always looking for something exciting to do. During Spring Break, he and his friends decide to go to the Moon. That’s right – the Moon. Titus lives in a technologically adv...
The best science fiction, in my opinion, is the kind that takes familiar material and extrapolates it in intriguing and even disturbing ways. You get to the end and have the uncomfortable realization that what you just read could actually happen. Feed was written before the advent of Web 2.0, before...
I had a lot of problems with this book, including some sloppy writing. I think the Feed is supposed to be like having the Internet in your head but in the book we really only see it used for something akin to instant messaging, selling things, and there's a reference to playing games. But because th...
Clever book, takes place in the future. Most people have a computer feed implanted in their heads so they can communicate, shop, surf the internet, listen to music inside their own heads. No more lugging computers around, messing with keyboards. Very cool premise. Very Jetsons, with flying cars and ...
I’ve wanted to read this for the longest time but never got around to it. I’m so glad I finally read it.Feed takes place in the future. In the future, everyone has feeds planted in their brains. Feeds are computer chips that allow information, advertisements, and chatting to be in your mind all the ...
I know this is considered a young adult book, but I didn't feel like I was reading a young adult book. I first thought, wow this is an off shoot of William Gibson's Neuromancer, but as I read more it reminded me more and more of Bret Easton Ellis's Less than Zero. I'm a fan of both those books and...
The only reasons this book did not get five stars is that:1. It started out odd and I did not get into it for awhile.2. How they talked, it just was odd and it took me a bit to figure it out.But it was a good book and it made me cry, but it has its problems.
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