47th out of 25,215 books
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95,977 voters
Brave New World
Far in the future, the World Controllers have finally created the ideal society. In laboratories worldwide, genetic science has brought the human race to perfection. From the Alpha-Plus mandarin class to the Epsilon-Minus Semi-Morons, designed to perform menial tasks, man is bred and educated to be blissfully content with his pre-destined role.
But, in the Central London Ha...more
But, in the Central London Ha...more
Paperback, 268 pages
Published
September 1st 1998
by Harper Perennial
(first published 1932)
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I need to parse my rating of this book into the good (or great), the bad and the very fugly because I thought aspects of it were inspired genius and parts of it were dreggy, boring and living near the border of awful. In the end, the wowness and importance of the novel's ideas as well as the segments that I thoroughly enjoyed carried the book to a strong 3.5 star rating.
THE REALLY GOOD/EXCELLENT - I loved the first third of the book in which the basic outline of the "Brave New World" and its d...more
Brave New World is a classic written to make its readers uncomfortable. It accomplishes its point well. Still, it is only getting 3 stars from me, as I rate books based on my personal level of enjoyment rather than literary value.
The characters of this book were not meant to be likeable - I am fine with that concept. The first few chapters made me want to curl up in the corner and cry - that's how repulsive the design of this universe was (mission accomplished, Mr. Huxley). But as we plunge int...more
The characters of this book were not meant to be likeable - I am fine with that concept. The first few chapters made me want to curl up in the corner and cry - that's how repulsive the design of this universe was (mission accomplished, Mr. Huxley). But as we plunge int...more
Brave New World is a vision of the future where science will (at last) be put full time into the service of our needs. Some of the ideas might seem a little controversial (because of our preconceived ideas) but we must be open minded...!

SEX. Biology teaches that sex is meant to be had. To put restrictions on sex is as silly as putting restrictions on which chair to sit. And like chairs, women are meant to be pneumatic. "Oh, she’s a splendid girl. Wonderfully pneumatic. I’m surprised you have...more
remember that last semester of english class, senior year, where every class seemed painfully long and excrutiatingly pointless? when everybody sat around secretly thinking of cute and witty things to put in other people's yearbooks? when the teachers realized we were already braindead from filling out three dozen student loan applications and college housing forms? that's when honors english started getting a little lazy.
not that i minded. everybody got a book list. then everybody got split up...more
not that i minded. everybody got a book list. then everybody got split up...more
Is this book really all that?
I was underwhelmed. But, strangely enough, that's why I'm giving it 3 stars. The ideas were all so familiar to me, like I've seen and read it all before, when actually this is one of a few early books that inspired all those other stories. Now Brave New World seems as unoriginal to me as Shakespeare feels cliche. So it really is a founding giant and a classic dystopia. That fact alone raises my rating from 2 to 3 stars.
There are a couple of reasons why I thought th...more
I was underwhelmed. But, strangely enough, that's why I'm giving it 3 stars. The ideas were all so familiar to me, like I've seen and read it all before, when actually this is one of a few early books that inspired all those other stories. Now Brave New World seems as unoriginal to me as Shakespeare feels cliche. So it really is a founding giant and a classic dystopia. That fact alone raises my rating from 2 to 3 stars.
There are a couple of reasons why I thought th...more
I have to apologize for this review. The concept of this book was so outlandish that I think it made my mind wander, and you may find some odd random thoughts scattered in it.
Anyhow, this book was so silly and unrealistic. Like any of this could happen. In the far future the babies are genetically engineered and designed for certain stations in life with a large workforce bred to be happy with menial jobs that don’t stress them physically or mentally. I really should look into getting that data...more
Anyhow, this book was so silly and unrealistic. Like any of this could happen. In the far future the babies are genetically engineered and designed for certain stations in life with a large workforce bred to be happy with menial jobs that don’t stress them physically or mentally. I really should look into getting that data...more
As a teenager I went through a period of reading a vast number of distopian novels - probably all the teenage angst. This is the one that has continued to haunt me however, long after the my youthful cynicism has died it's death. It's basically a book about the utopian ideal - everyone's happy, everyone has what they want and EVERYTHING is based on logical principles. However, there is something very rotten at the heart. It's about how what we want isn't always what we should get. It looks at ho...more
I have now concluded another of the grand pantheon of the classics of the dystopian genre. It is no mere clone of the other works, although incidentally it does feature cloning within its story. I would place this on the same level as 1984 in terms of the ideas conveyed within. However I would also say that it completely stands alone as its own creation. It perhaps has less solidity and depth and the words are less lyrical and poetic than Orwell's. That said I was blown away at several key momen...more
In the 26th century, after a destructive war, the world lives in peace, managed by World Controllers who use the principles of assembly-line manufacture and psychology to enforce a ubiquitous, passivist, pansexual, consumerist culture. Raised from cells in a lab (the idea of mothers and fathers characterized as obscene) into castes (Alpha to Epsilon) through hypnopedia and Skinner-like conditioning through pain, people’s mental and physical growth is chosen and accordingly expanded or stunted. T...more
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is a didactic dystopian novel published during the year 1932. This boldly prophetic novel sets out to predict the future of humanity. Now, more than 80 years later, it has proven itself as a masterpiece and will continue to through the years. This novel is a criticism to "consumerism" which Huxley rightly predicts as the motor of the future. The dystopia he created is a mirror of our own. Only that he exaggerates man's greatest need, the need to consume, which pr...more
In Brave New World, first published in 1932, Huxley paints the picture of a world that is willing to surrender true joy for a bland happiness free of suffering, that is willing to abandon truth for comfort, that is willing to eschew heights in order to avoid depths, and that is quick to surrender human ambition and individual personality for the sake of societal harmony. It is a frightening presentation, precisely because it does not seem too improbable. Even in the United States, which is one o...more
Mr Foster duly told them....more
Told them of the growing embryo on its bed of peritoneum. Made them taste the rich blood-surrogate on which it fed. Explained why it had to be stimulated with placentin and thyroxin. Told them of the corpus luteum extract. Showed them the jets through which at every twelfth metre from zero to 2040 it was automatically injected. Spoke of those gradually increasing doses of pituitary administered during the final ninety-six metres of their course. Described the artificial
Aug 07, 2009
Mike Philbin
rated it
5 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
consumerists - wake up from your comfortable slumber
Recommended to Mike by:
Kailleaugh Andersson
the first five chapters of this book (seventy years after its publication) are like looking at today, Sunday the 11th of May 2008. Much more an accurate rendition of soft-Fascist consumerism (Sony, Nike, Mortagage hysteria) and mind control (9/11, the war on terror) than anything Philip K Dick tried to cook up on his bent drug spoon.
and the book continues to be 'amazing' right through Mustapha Mond's sympathetic climactic expose and slightly beyond infamy into the wicked ending.
despair, horror,...more
and the book continues to be 'amazing' right through Mustapha Mond's sympathetic climactic expose and slightly beyond infamy into the wicked ending.
despair, horror,...more
Jun 01, 2013
Ðɑηηɑ
rated it
3 of 5 stars
Recommends it for:
Dystopia fans who like classics
Shelves:
dystopia,
classics,
male-authors,
hebrew,
paperback,
bestseller,
own,
shortly-reviewed,
pub-1930s,
rgc-finished,
3-stars,
award-winning,
british-author,
has-a-movie,
male-protagonist,
modern-classics,
know-all-3rd-person-narrator,
shakespeare-reference,
london,
20th-century,
urban,
adult-characters,
adult
2.5/5
Recommends it for: open minded people
"Brave New World" is one of the most bright and original ideas I have heard in a while.
Let me just warn you about something and note that upon all, the writing is not very attractive, like I would have expected, but I have read a transalation of it into my mother language and I did like it, eventually. It just take time to get into it.
I like dystopia, I think. But since I have a very little experience with the genre, I have decided to read this classic...more
Recommends it for: open minded people
"Brave New World" is one of the most bright and original ideas I have heard in a while.
Let me just warn you about something and note that upon all, the writing is not very attractive, like I would have expected, but I have read a transalation of it into my mother language and I did like it, eventually. It just take time to get into it.
I like dystopia, I think. But since I have a very little experience with the genre, I have decided to read this classic...more
Generally I'm skeptical of modern novels written by drug-using spiritualists that critique American capitalism, but this book turned out to be surprisingly good. It was both enjoyable and thought-provoking, as any piece of literature should be.
In this brave new world, the government controls its citizens by providing them with seemingly endless pleasure. The citizens are not encouraged to think for themselves, but rather are engineered believing that they are just another (replaceable) cog in t...more
In this brave new world, the government controls its citizens by providing them with seemingly endless pleasure. The citizens are not encouraged to think for themselves, but rather are engineered believing that they are just another (replaceable) cog in t...more
Awesome book of the dystopia/utopia genre that l simply loved. I can fully understand why it is considered a masterpiece and I am surprised it is not referenced more in popular culture (seems like Orwell’s 1984 gets much more publicity today, whereas this one might be more on point in describing today’s new world order.) In looking up the listed themes on the cliff notes version of the novel, the following are referenced: the use of technology to control society; the consumer society; the incomp...more
I'm starting to hate "the mainstream's" fascination with dystopian novels. It's basically an education system marketing ploy dreamed up by the Media Lords in control of Orwell and Huxley's copyrights. Also academics and lay readers are ashamed to discuss science fiction these days so they have to fancy it up with genres like the dystopian novel. Brave New World is a pretty good dystopian yarn, fairly outdated (though not as outdated as 1984), fairly well written, fairly well executed. I hope it'...more
i hate reviewing books like this one cause i got nothing new to say....at times i found it stupid and effortless plus non sense at the same time i thought it was gennious and inteligent,one other time i thought i was reading a book about religion but anyway that was written by a Huxley and i am just a 24 y.o. guy who hasn't done sex for a while....Controversial,yet importand....and a bit random!
This book presents a futuristic dystopia of an unusual kind. Unlike in Orwell's 1984, Huxley's dystopia is one in which everyone is happy. However, they are happy in only the most trivial sense: they lead lives of simple pleasures, but lives without science, art, philosophy or religion. In short, lives without deeper meaning. Although people are expected to work hard and efficiently during working hours, during off hours people live in an infantile way, never engaging their minds, and satisfying...more
Incredible to think this science-fiction book by Aldous Huxley was first published in 1932. Portrays a future where happiness is the universal goal of human society. Total happiness is ultimately achieved by the removal of art, science, and religion, and maintained by technology, conditioning, total fulfillment of physical desires, and drugs. The novel gets poignant when a 'savage' raised at a primitive Reservation in the desert Southwest enters the civilized world. The contrasts of the two worl...more
One of science fiction’s most enduring traits is its ability to ruminate upon the ways in which science and technology allow us to manipulate and re-engineer society. In this sense, the distinction between soft and hard science fiction disappears—all science fiction is inherently social, for no matter how much detail goes into describing the technological advances that populate possible futures, the meat of the story is always the effect these technologies have on the people using them. Innovati...more
May 08, 2010
Cecily
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
sci-fi-or-futuristic,
classics
Wow, how does such a slim volume explore so many BIG issues, whilst also telling an interesting story?
Although published nearly 80 years ago (1932), it presciently exposes many issues that are problematic in our time: consumerism; the nature of happiness; what it means to be civilised; cloning and other reproductive technologies; parenting, families, loyalty, promiscuity; recreational drug use; social mobility and equality of opportunity; individualism versus group loyalty; pornography; benevole...more
Although published nearly 80 years ago (1932), it presciently exposes many issues that are problematic in our time: consumerism; the nature of happiness; what it means to be civilised; cloning and other reproductive technologies; parenting, families, loyalty, promiscuity; recreational drug use; social mobility and equality of opportunity; individualism versus group loyalty; pornography; benevole...more
This book is on many a top 100 reading list. Aldous Huxley has the reputation of being an intellectual giant. His heritage places him in the land of England, the place where all of the great literary giants come. A Brave New World unfortunately does not live up to the credits,pedigree or even the cult following that chases after it.
Summary: In a nutshell this book is a mess. I am assuming that the majority of individuals that rate this book high on a novel list or 5 star it on here on amazon do...more
Summary: In a nutshell this book is a mess. I am assuming that the majority of individuals that rate this book high on a novel list or 5 star it on here on amazon do...more
From my blog (yeah, I know it's lengthy):
I'm finding myself drawn to dystopian novels lately. Not really sure why. I think it's partly because Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale had such an effect on me when I was in college, and I'm constantly looking for something that disquiets my soul in the same way. And I very much enjoyed Fahrenheit 451. Plus books like this keep popping out at me at the library. Anyway, my next foray into dystopia was Brave New World by Aldous Huxley.
The future Earth...more
I'm finding myself drawn to dystopian novels lately. Not really sure why. I think it's partly because Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale had such an effect on me when I was in college, and I'm constantly looking for something that disquiets my soul in the same way. And I very much enjoyed Fahrenheit 451. Plus books like this keep popping out at me at the library. Anyway, my next foray into dystopia was Brave New World by Aldous Huxley.
The future Earth...more
There's some provocative discussion of this book in Houellebecq's Les Particules Elémentaires, which I just finished. One of the characters argues that Huxley originally intended his world as a utopia rather than a dystopia, and then changed his mind and tried to convince everyone it was meant ironically.
The proof? Apart from the caste system, which has been rendered unnecessary by computers, this is the world we're busily trying to create for ourselves, and which almost everyone would actually...more
The proof? Apart from the caste system, which has been rendered unnecessary by computers, this is the world we're busily trying to create for ourselves, and which almost everyone would actually...more
When my friends and I recently came to the realization that Americans have come to believe that the pursuit of happiness has become an inalienable right and that such pursuit means “I shouldn’t have to feel pain”, well, we thought we were being profoundly original. Apparently Huxley in this dystopian piece on what the society he lived in might look like at it’s full out extents realized this way before we did. (Darn you Aldous!) Written in the 30’s it’s almost eery how close the world he created...more
A Brave New World by Aldous Huxley was both disturbing and creepy. I loved it. I was absolutely amazed at how many movies I could think of that seemed inspired by this book. And the fact it was written in 1932, well before its time! A book about cloning humans to work in different classes to create the perfect Utopia, it didn't seem that far in the future to some of the technology that is available today. Dividing the people into classes labeled Alphas, Betas, etc., the book talks about the mora...more
Herein lies the eternal conflict of the individual who derives just as much enjoyment from reading books as she does writing about them: One interest always has a way of interfering with the other. Sometimes I have a lot to say about a book but don't quite know how to go about it so I wait for a solution that may or may not be chanced upon; sometimes I just want to dive right into the next novel. Both leave me with a queue of unreviewed books (like this one almost was), and I know that I can't b...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Read-along: Brave New World | Admirável Mundo Novo | 15 | 24 | Jun 18, 2013 05:15am | |
| Classics for Begi...: * Brave New World by Aldous Huxley | 29 | 106 | May 21, 2013 08:40am | |
| Classics Without ...: Bookshelf, Library Bag or Donation Box: Review | 26 | 151 | May 20, 2013 01:23pm | |
| Classics Without ...: Chapter 7-12 | 30 | 102 | May 20, 2013 12:17pm |
Aldous Leonard Huxley was an English writer and one of the most prominent members of the famous Huxley family. He spent the latter part of his life in the United States, living in Los Angeles from 1937 until his death in 1963. Best known for his novels and wide-ranging output of essays, he also published short stories, poetry, travel writing, and film stories and scripts. Through his novels and es...more
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“Words can be like X-rays if you use them properly -- they’ll go through anything. You read and you’re pierced.”
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“But I don't want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.”
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