Helpful Score: 3
Little Brother pretty much lived up to the hype it's been getting. It's not perfect, but it is close. An excellent book explaining the loss of civil liberties, surveillance, abuse of Homeland Security powers, and the power of an informed and active populace of all ages aimed at a YA audience. I'd say it's good for kids about 12 or 13 and older. I'll be buying several copies for some folks (kids and adults) for holiday gifts for sure.
Helpful Score: 3
This is a great book and the only reason that I see it is in the YA shelves is because the mail character is a teen. This book is very powerful and can really make you think about how much should we allow the government to know about what we do.
This book opens our eyes not only to what kind of tracking is taking place but makes us ask the question, "Is that OK?"
This book opens our eyes not only to what kind of tracking is taking place but makes us ask the question, "Is that OK?"
Helpful Score: 3
~9/3/08 A YA, very hip version of 1984, Marcus, who is also called w1n5t0n and M1k3y, is 17 years old and in the Tenderloin with three friends ARGing (its a game) when a bomb blows up the Bay Bridge. They go the Powell Street BART station, but they dont stay there.
The Department of Homeland Security arrests them, puts them first in Alcatraz, then at Treasure Island, where they are interrogated, tortured, humiliated as enemy aliens. Marcus and two of his friends are released after five days. They are told by the DHS that if they tell anyone what happened they will be arrested again and put somewhere much worse.
So, Marcus doesnt tell his parents, other friends, and he fights the DHS using his Xbox. Meanwhile, the DHS presence is becoming omnipresent: all to keep people safe.
You cant get anything done by doing nothing. Its our country. Theyve taken it away from us. The terrorists who attack us are still free -- but were not. I cant go underground for a year, ten years, my whole life, waiting for freedom to be handed to me. Freedom is something you have to take for yourself.
I am 35 years too old to be the intended audience for this book, I dont understand most of the technology Marcus fights or uses as weapons, but I recognize that its an amazing thesis. And I hope it is as popular with bright young geeks as it should and needs to be. I want thousands of adolescents to view it as a manual.
The Department of Homeland Security arrests them, puts them first in Alcatraz, then at Treasure Island, where they are interrogated, tortured, humiliated as enemy aliens. Marcus and two of his friends are released after five days. They are told by the DHS that if they tell anyone what happened they will be arrested again and put somewhere much worse.
So, Marcus doesnt tell his parents, other friends, and he fights the DHS using his Xbox. Meanwhile, the DHS presence is becoming omnipresent: all to keep people safe.
You cant get anything done by doing nothing. Its our country. Theyve taken it away from us. The terrorists who attack us are still free -- but were not. I cant go underground for a year, ten years, my whole life, waiting for freedom to be handed to me. Freedom is something you have to take for yourself.
I am 35 years too old to be the intended audience for this book, I dont understand most of the technology Marcus fights or uses as weapons, but I recognize that its an amazing thesis. And I hope it is as popular with bright young geeks as it should and needs to be. I want thousands of adolescents to view it as a manual.
Helpful Score: 2
I don't think I have ever rated anything five stars before, but this book deserves it.
Essentially a modernized version of the classic 1984, but so much more. It really has a lot of plot elements that are different. I liked this book a lot better that 1984, in fact, because as a teenager in the Bay Area, not an adult in England, I can relate to it a lot more.
Whoever you are, this is an extremely important book to read, because the torture, wiretapping, and code-making and -breaking techniques are really in use today, making this a completely believable and possible story.
I hope that our country isn't like this in five or ten years, but I worry that it might be.
Essentially a modernized version of the classic 1984, but so much more. It really has a lot of plot elements that are different. I liked this book a lot better that 1984, in fact, because as a teenager in the Bay Area, not an adult in England, I can relate to it a lot more.
Whoever you are, this is an extremely important book to read, because the torture, wiretapping, and code-making and -breaking techniques are really in use today, making this a completely believable and possible story.
I hope that our country isn't like this in five or ten years, but I worry that it might be.