Where Does the Setting of Feed by Mt Anderson Take Place

In a future world where internet connections feed directly into the consumer's brain, thought is supplemented by advertising banners, and language has gone into a steep decline, a little love story unfolds. Titus, an average kid on a weekend trip to the moon, meets Violet, a brainy girl who has decided to try to fight the feed. Assaulted by a hacker who interrupts their connection, they struggle to understand what has happened to them – and to everyone around them.

In his National Book Award Finalist Feed, M. T. Anderson has created a not-so-brave new world – and a smart, savage satire that has captivated readers with its view of an imagined future that veers unnervingly close to the here and now.

National Book Award Finalist

Los Angeles Times Book Prize Winner

New York Times Book Review Notable Books of the Year

Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards – Honor Book

Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year

Chicago Public Library Best Books for Children and Teens

ALA (American Library Association) Best Books for Young Adults

Junior Library Guild Selection

Volunteer State Book Award Master List (Tennessee)

Riverbank Review Children's Books of Distinction

Book Sense 76 Top 10 Picks

Horn Book Fanfare

Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books – Bulletin Blue Ribbons

Booklist Editors' Choice

"Subversive, vigorously conceived, painfully situated at the juncture where funny crosses into tragic, FEED demonstrates that young-adult novels are alive and well and able to deliver a jolt." – The New York Times Book Review

"Merciless and very clever." — The New Yorker

"This satire offers a thought-provoking and scathing indictment that may prod readers to examine the more sinister possibilities of corporate- and media-dominated culture." – Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Satire at its finest." – Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"Brilliant … Relentlessly funny . . ." – Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, starred review

"M.T. Anderson has created the perfect device for an ingenious satire of corporate America and our present-day value system…Like those in a funhouse mirror, the reflections the novel shows us may be ugly and distorted, but they are undeniably ourselves." – The Horn Book, starred review

"[A] modern classic." – Nick Hornby, author of About a Boy and High Fidelity

"Chillingly satirical. . . . A terrific choice for both teen and adult book discussion groups." – NPR Morning Edition

"This dystopic vision is dark but quite believable. Sad and strong and scary." – Chicago Tribune

"As with the best futuristic fiction, it's scary how little needs to be exaggerated." – Newsday

"Chillingly satirical. . . . A terrific choice for both teen and adult book discussion groups." – NPR Morning Edition

"It's not easy for an author of books for young readers to get attention, but Boston's M. T. Anderson has been making waves recently with his eerie futuristic novel, FEED." – Boston Globe

"A gripping, intriguing, and unique cautionary novel…" – School Library Journal

On Feed

When I was a teenager, I was irritated at the way companies tried to sell me things. I think this is true of a lot of teens. All around us, ads and tv shows and movies are showing us images of the high life, playing on our desire to belong. There's always that subliminal message seducing us and bullying us: If you just get this, and buy this, and order that, you'll be cool, and you'll be loved. See how much fun these kids are having? If you want to be wanted, then you need to want what other people want. And other people – what they want is this. Buy it. Buy it now.

This has become even more intense (and not just for teens!) now that most of us are connected all the time through devices of one kind or another. I don't even notice the ads that flit past me any more, I take them so much for granted. And even though I know that my favorite shows are paid for product placement, I take that for granted, too.

Of course, I wrote Feed back in 2001, before most of these devices existed, and before marketing systems had become as sophisticated as they are now. But even then, before the iPhone and before the Blackberry became big, I was still tapped into a wider system of corporate communication. Already my dreams of who I wanted to be, my understanding of who I had been in the past, my hopes for who I'd become in the future – these things had already been influenced and perhaps even constructed by advertising images, movie stills, and prime-time TV, the hours of images of twenty-somethings crammed into bars, girls smiling at men who drank the right beer, leaving me with a dim impression that I was supposed to like a certain kind of music, a certain kind of shirt, a certain kind of ribs.

So I began to conceive of a story in which these media connections and social networking connections weren't external, but within us all. What if we no longer needed devices? What if we had an internet feed within us, so we were never disconnected?

It is out of the memory of my anger as a teen at the bullying maneuvers of "youth marketing" that I wrote the book – but also out of the knowledge that even now, I'm part of this system of desire. I still can't get out of my head the images of who I'm supposed to be. (For my current age: the picket fence; the lawn; holding some daughter up toward the sun; strapping my tykes into the SUV.)

I don't think this would have been an interesting book to write (or to read) if I had only hated the hyper-marketed world I describe. For me, the key to the discomfort is how much I love some of it, how much I still do want to be slick like the people on the tube, beautiful, laughing, surrounded by friends. And how much I legitimately do think that the technology-based information resources at our command now are incredible (things like Project Gutenberg, the Internet Archive, instant music and movie downloads, even the much-maligned Wikipedia). These are tools for an amazing new intellectual understanding of the world, though they come with strings attached. Think about the way technological progress over the last twenty years has revolutionized the artistic possibilities in film, or the scientific processes of medical experimentation – or almost any field. We have at our fingertips knowledge and power like no other generation before us, and that's intoxicating. I am no Luddite. And this would not have been an effective satire, in my opinion, if I hadn't also been seduced by what I was mocking. It is the anguish of indecision that animates it. This is indeed a brave new world, but there is a cost.

People have told me that Feed is coming true. (Some of the technologies I discussed have been explored in recent years.) But in a sense, I believe it already was the reality when I was writing.

I was already dreaming in advertisements.

A NOTE FOR WRITERS: This was a book I just started writing without knowing where it was going. I wandered into it. Originally, it was supposed to be a short story for a collection on literacy. Obviously, it got way too long, and I presented it to my editor at Candlewick, Liz Bicknell, as a book instead.

Writing without a design for the novel was complicated. It took me one complete draft before I even knew where the story was. I wandered around in loops trying to find the plot. Then I had to go back and cut out a lot of pieces to make it feel forceful and directed. If I remember correctly, I cut about fifty pages or so to make it the book it is now.

Don't worry. You won't miss any of those pages.

Writers often hate revision. To me, revision is difficult, but it can feel great. Like cutting off some huge, cheesy growth on your face or your foot – and suddenly you can breathe more freely and move more easily.

Don't fear the knife.

cowartthrou1968.blogspot.com

Source: http://mt-anderson.com/blog/his-books/books-for-teens-and-adults/feed-2/

0 Response to "Where Does the Setting of Feed by Mt Anderson Take Place"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel