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Aldous Huxley: Brave New World (Paperback, 1956, Modern Library) 4 stars

Originally published in 1932, this outstanding work of literature is more crucial and relevant today …

Review of 'Brave New World' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Brave New World paints a future that still hasn't found the secrets of automation through robotics and computing. This makes it especially interesting, as the world Aldous Huxley imagines is so much different from ours, but eerily similar as well.

However, I feel like this utopian satire falls short to scrutiny in the modern era with the advent of computers and robotics. Huxley's future society still relies on the inefficiencies of human labor, and as such, has become dystopian solely through it's need for human capital. This is not to say that aspects of Huxley's dystopia do not ring true today; psychological conditioning and manipulation in the pursuit of capitalistic interests are issues facing society today.

While I enjoyed the book, I found it to be more akin to philosophical allegory than a powerful piece of narrative fiction. I was constantly feeling as if the characters were dropping character so they could deliver a treatise on the nature of being, spirituality, or material goods. As the book went on, I found myself growing tired of Huxley's appeal to traditional values as they became more and more tangled with what I read was an appeal to individuality and freedom.