Little Brother
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Little Brother (Little Brother #1)

3.97 of 5 stars 3.97  ·  rating details  ·  18,496 ratings  ·  3,151 reviews
Marcus, a.k.a w1n5t0n, is only seventeen years old, but he figures he already knows how the system works - and how to work the system. Smart, fast, and wise to the ways of the networked world, he has no trouble outwitting his high school's intrusive but clumsy surveillance systems.

But his whole world changes when he and his friends find themselves caught in the aftermath o...more

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Krystyn
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Michael
In an attempt to win over a new generation of sci-fi readers, Cory Doctorow's "Little Brother" is marketed as a young adult book. However, adult readers shouldn't worry that Doctorow's book will leave them behind or have them feeling juvenile for reading it.

"Little Brother" is a mature, contemporary novel that looks at the issue of security in a near-future that doesn't seem too far from today. When San Francisco is attacked by terrorists, seventeen-year-old hacker Marcus and his friends are out...more
Wendy
Torn between two and three stars. I enjoyed reading this; the plot was interesting, and all the informative parts were pretty accessible (well, the computer/crypto stuff was done much, much better than the history). But I thought the writing was pretty bad--it got increasingly melodramatic as the book went along. I kept waiting for Marcus to say to one of his friends "But down here, it's our time! It's our time down here!". I never bought his voice as that of an American kid--there were Britishi...more
Sandi
Jun 23, 2008 Sandi rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Every American over 14 (does contain some graphic material)
There is a reason why totalitarian governments ban books. The reason is that books can change the world. "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and Frederick Douglass' autobiography opened people's eyes to the evils of slavery; Anne Frank's Diary taught us that genocide kills innocent young girls; "To Kill a Mockingbird" showed us that justice isn't always just and that people should be judged by their character rather than the color of their skin; "The Grapes of Wrath" opened our eyes to the plight of migrant far...more
Monica Edinger
I'm feeling totally weird about feeling so unenthusiastic about this book as everyone I know who has read it seems to have loved it. (Just see that it got another star, this one from the Horn Book.) Seems like I'm the only person on earth who didn't. Ah well. (Cory, if you are reading this stop --- I'm clearly alone in my feelings here. Go read all the reviews of people who like it. Forget about mine.)

So anyway, I read it on the plane to ALA and had to really push to finish it. Some of the writi...more
Chloe
One of the things that I love most about science fiction is its ability to look at trends in contemporary society, extrapolate them to their most extreme ends, and then use those extremes to reveal a fantastic analysis of our world and the directions that we are heading down. Good science fiction is the type that makes you step back when you finish and take a closer look at our own lives. With Little Brother, Cory Doctorow has crafted just such a novel. The fact that this is a book whose intende...more
Hayden
Oy, what a disappointment. I kept thinking, right up until the very end, that this book was about to get awesome, but it never did. The premise--a very near future where Homeland Security cracks down on ordinary citizens like a mofo--could be great. But unlike 1984, Little Brother is never able to build any tension, or take advantage of all the possibilities for betrayal and suspicion in a world where the DHS recruits teens to spy on each other.

Instead, Little Brother seems to be just a gross fa...more
Jackie "the Librarian"
A worst-case scenario teen thriller of what could happen if our war on terror gave Homeland Security an excuse to wield absolute power and new surveillance technology over our lives to track our every move. Countering this is a teen who knows all about computer systems, security, and various role-playing games. It's an homage to 1984, Little Brother, as opposed to Big Brother, and it reminded me of Harry Harrison's The Stainless Steel Rat. It was all a bit preposterous and over the top, but that...more
Sarah
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Jamil
Jun 08, 2008 Jamil rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: sonic, cyber, disaffected, angry, dangerous youth
Everybody's talking 'bout the stormy weather
And what's a man do to but work out whether it's true?
Looking for a man with a focus and a temper
Who can open up a map and see between one and two

Time to get it
Before you let it
Get to you

Here he comes now
Stick to your guns
And let him through

Everybody's coming from the winter vacation
Taking in the sun in a exaltation to you
You come running in on platform shoes
With Marshall stacks
To at least just give us a clue
Ah, here it comes
I know it's someone I knew

T...more
Jessica
Set in San Francisco in the year 2015, Little Brother follows 17 year old Marcus, an intelligent, techie teen. While skipping school, he's thrown into the middle of a terrorist attack and picked up by the Department of Homeland Security under suspicion of being involved. After his eventual release, Marcus vows to take down the DHS and fight against the newly established police state.

This book was awesome and definitely worth finishing in a day. Although written for a YA audience, this could clea...more
Jason
I'm reading an ARC of Cory Doctorow's new book and it is predictably well written and surprisingly infuriating. It's like a sub rosa training manual for pro-tech pro-civil liberty pro-privacy activists of tomorrow. He extrapolates into the future the tiniest amount but today's greasy fingerprints are all over the dystopic picture he paints of individual freedom. I'm finding myself enraged page after page, which is the whole point, and Doctorow's casual references to easily-kitbashed technology l...more
Brendan
What sounds from the description like a fun techno-thriller tinged with lefty politics is instead a didactic bore of a blog entry masquerading as a novel. I agree with the politics of the book; it's the bad writing I have a problem with. It seems Doctorow was so concerned with conveying his Important Message that he forgot that long lectures tend to kill plot momentum. (He also forgot about credible characters and dialogue that sounds like a real human being would actually say it.) A colossal di...more
Ash
The basis of this story was very interesting, but it has a lot of tech stuff in it and I can barely work a cell phone, so most of the jargon obviously went over my head.
It annoyed me just how political it was, and completely one sided to boot. Some might argue that the dad gave a bit of the other perspective but that was a pretty half-arsed attempt if you ask me. I understand that this was supposed to show what could happen if the government ever gained too much power, but it ended up looking l...more
Ben Babcock
I read this book in a single night, which is a pretty good testament to how much I enjoyed it. I won't be the first person to compare Little Brother to 1984 (Doctorow himself does it, alluding to it in the story by giving his protagonist the handle w1n5t0n and through the title of the book itself), but it's a very apt comparison. Little Brother is 1984 updated to take into account September 11th, the Internet, and the Department of Homeland Security. I'm not saying this book supplants 1984; you...more
Lee
Jun 29, 2008 Lee rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: people with a good critique
Shelves: kids
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Brownbetty
May 08, 2008 Brownbetty rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Brownbetty by: Vassilissa
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Angela
The other day, editor Patrick Nielsen Hayden posted up on Making Light that he had several dozen ARCs of Cory Doctorow's forthcoming novel Little Brother to hand out to any readers of the blog willing to immediately read it and talk about it. He announced a specific email address you could contact to ask for one of the books, and all you had to do was provide an address to which they could send it.

I was one of those fortunate enough to get in an email before they ran out of copies, and mine arri...more
Jennifer
Like many books, this one started with a lot of promise and quickly fizzled. I followed through until the end, however, hoping for some redeeming factor. I wanted to like the book - I really did. Some aspects were good but too many others felt contrived and the entire thing felt too much like a thinly veiled political statement. Subtlety has no place in this book. It was well written and coherent, the pacing was decent. I think the plot was just ... meh. The overtly political leanings really tur...more
Emily
17-year-old hacker, tinkerer, and gamer Marcus finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time when he skips school and gets caught in the worst incident of terrorism in the U.S. He gets separated from his friends, detained by Homeland Security.

As the government starts encroaching more and more on civil liberties, Marcus is determined to get back at DHS, stop the questioning and detainment of innocent civilians, and generally take back the government from the law-and-order-at-all-costs brigad...more
Jenny
Blissfully geeky, great capture of intelligent teenagers in San Francisco, and a very realistic, believable story about what a short distance we are from a complete and utter police state. *grin*

Do you trade privacy for security?

ETA (1/21/12, just re-read this and did a podcast discussion with SFF Audio)

It was harder to read Little Brother the second time around. Not because the book is hard to read, it is the opposite. But because of everything we've just been through in the USA with SOPA and P...more
Mike (the Paladin)
I didn't place this on any of my shelves besides the "read" shelf. It's a fantasy, sort of, it takes place in an urban area...on the other hand it's really a political thriller, sort of... Never mind we'll just say I read it and talk about the book.

This book was actually written at the end of the Bush administration, and I think you'll find that obvious. I like this book, I recommend this book, but there is a certain amount of irony...some of it unintentional irony I believe. On the other hand t...more
Dan
First let me say that Little Brother is the first novel/book that I have read from cover to cover as an ebook. I read it on my ipad and I must say that I found it a rather pleasant experience. Despite this pleasantness I don't see ebooks replacing my beloved print editions anytime soon. Now on to the book. Little Brother is considered a young adult novel but don't let that designation fool you, as it is an excellent read for all ages. Doctorow tells us a tale set in the aftermath of a terrorist...more
Arlene
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow is a great read! This is one of those books that makes you think and start to question the world we live in. I was captivated by the first page and could not put it down.

The book is about Marcus Yallow, a technically savvy ‘geek’, who finds himself along with his friends targeted as a suspected terrorist by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) immediately after the bombing of the San Francisco Bay Bridge. Prior to the bombing, Marcus was a normal teenager who...more
Not
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Rachel
May 25, 2008 Rachel rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone
Recommended to Rachel by: neil gaiman
Shelves: war, dystopian, ya
after I finished: READ THIS BOOK. Read it. Read it and then send it to your friends and make them read it.


I think I found this via a link from Neil Gaiman's blog. Which means I should have read it posthaste, but hey, I'm only human and I had sparkly vampire braincandy to read. Now I'm ready to be serious again.

The intro alone made me fall in love.


end of chapter 2: Dude, it's like Neal Stephenson decided to hang out with high-schoolers. This kicks ass.

sometime in the middle: Only difficulty is th...more
Chad
I really wanted to like this book, but am a bit baffled at all the acclaim it's getting. I can see what Doctorow is trying to do, but he gets too preachy far too often and that kills any point he was trying to make for me. Marcus is too talented, too perfect at everything that needs to be done to be a legitimate portrayal of a teenager. I've seen other reviews say that he reads like Doctorow created a version of what he wished he was like at that age, and I agree completely. Throw in the most on...more
J.D.
Excellent, scarily plausible vision of just how brutal and insane American life could get if we give in to fear and surrender our minds to the fear of terrorist attack. The Department of Homeland Security responds to a major terrorist incident in San Franciso by turning everyone, especially computer savvy kids, into presumptive criminals. One kid fights back with the tools at his disposal and pays some terrible dues.

I'm not sure I totally buy the ending, but this book is a must-read for this da...more
Meghan
Hits you over the head with its message at times, which can be annoying if typical of the YA genre. But it is what they call 'gripping' and keeps up with adrenaline and a fast pace. There is a bibliography at the back with a lot of great suggestions for further reading, including some of Cory Doctorow's favorite books - one of which is one of my favorite books, Alan Mendelsohn and the Boy from Mars by Daniel Pinkwater.
Brigid *Flying Kick-a-pow!*
It was good. Funny, intriguing, believable ... I liked it. It was a little cliché, maybe. And some of the scenes were a bit ... awkward. But over all, pretty good. Kinda reminded me of Scott Westerfeld's So Yesterday. Definitely some Westerfeld influence in this book, only it was more PG-13 rated. Ahem.
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Canadian blogger, journalist and science fiction author who serves as co-editor of the blog Boing Boing.

He is an activist in favor of liberalizing copyright laws and a proponent of the Creative Commons organization, using some of their licenses for his books.

Some common themes of his work include digital rights management, file sharing, Disney, and post-scarcity economics.

http://us.macmillan.com...more
More about Cory Doctorow...
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