Little brother

No cover

Cory Doctorow: Little brother (AudiobookFormat, 2008, Random House/Listening Library)

[sound recording] /, 72 pages

English language

Published July 10, 2008 by Random House/Listening Library.

ISBN:
978-0-7393-7287-6
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
231344919

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4 stars (16 reviews)

After being interrogated for days by the Department of Homeland Security in the aftermath of a major terrorist attack on San Francisco, California, seventeen-year-old Marcus, released into what is now a police state, decides to use his expertise in computer hacking to set things right.

Interrogated for days by the Department of Homeland Security in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on San Francisco, 17-year-old Marcus is released into what is now a police state and decides to use his expertise in computer hacking to set things right.

26 editions

Review of 'Little Brother' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Cory Doctorow’s intentions in writing Little Brother are many and varied and all of them worthy. This is a timely book that tackles some hard issues being felt not only in the US but around the world and does so in a cheeky, entertaining way while arguing very sensibly for reason to prevail.

Marcus is a high school student in San Francisco of a few years from now when ‘security’ systems have become much more pervasive. Even the classroom halls have monitors that identify students by studying their gait — face recognition systems being deemed ‘unconstitutional’. But Marcus is adept at fooling such software, especially when he wants to cut class to play the latest episode of an online treasure hunt game. Then terrorists blow up the Oakland Bay Bridge, Marcus and friends are picked up by Department of Homeland Security goons, and when Marcus refuses to unlock his phone …

Review of 'Little Brother' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Takes a bit of time to get going because of Doctorow's tendency to repeatedly stop and dump large amounts of information on the reader. But once it gets going it is a pretty good thriller - even if you're not a teenager anymore - and one that makes it's central point very effectively: that trying to trade liberty for security is not only wrong in principle but ineffective - or even counter-productive - in practice.

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Subjects

  • United States
  • Juvenile fiction
  • Computer hackers
  • United States. Department of Homeland Security
  • Hackers
  • Civil rights
  • Counterculture
  • Terrorism
  • Fiction

Places

  • San Francisco (Calif.)