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Little Brother by Cory Doctorow - Little Brother

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11/10/2011
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Little Brother by Cory Doctorow









Little Brother





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 of a major terrorist attack on San Francisco. In the

wrong place at the wrong time, Marcus and his crew are apprehended by

the Department of Homeland Security and whisked away to a secret prison

where they’re mercilessly interrogated for days.







When the DHS finally releases them, Marcus discovers that his city has

become a police state where every citizen is treated like a potential

terrorist. He knows that no one will believe his story, which leaves him only

one option: to take down the DHS himself.



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I put off reading Little Brother for some time. See, I have this

subconscious aversion to the term "Young Adult". Which is weird,

considering how I've loved almost all the YA books I've ever read, but

there you have it.



Man, do I hate myself for waiting so long! Cory Doctorow's all-too-real

dystopian vision of "security measures" gone wrong is one of the most

gripping and compelling stories I've read this year. The story is set in an

unspecified future a few years from now. Marcus Yallow is a 17-year old

boy living in San Francisco. One day, while ditching school with his friends

to look for a real-life clues from an on-line game, he becomes witness to a

terrorist attack on the Bay Bridge. Being in the wrong place at the oh-so-

wrong time, Marcus is nabbed by the Department of Homeland Security. A

few smart-ass "I know my rights and I wanna know what I've been charged

with" retorts on his part lead to a week of physical and mental torture, while

the DHS extract all his little teen secrets from him just for the heck of it.

After that he is released, together with two of his pals. The fourth - his best

friend Darryl - remains missing.



In those few days the city has changed. It is now an Orwellian nightmare of

surveillance, security checkpoints, tagging and random checks on the

street by the forces of the DHS. Even broken and scared, Marcus still can't

quell the fury and indignation he feels at this violation of his freedom and

privacy. And after what has been done to him, the only course he sees is

making them pay for it. And taking the country back from tyranny in the

name of "security". Thus begins a story of a techno-revolution that is not

dissimilar to the movements in the 60s.



What I loved about Little Brother was the feeling of urgency, the looming

shadow of a reality that is rapidly turning into a Fascist nightmare. Also, the

main character Marcus is one of the most believable teens I've seen in a

novel in a long time. He is not idealized, but neither is he dumbed-down for

stereotype's sake. He is a smart, socially aware boy who makes mistakes,

feels fear and insecurity; he is vulnerable and cocky at the same time, he

mouths off and gets into trouble. But his naivete is also a shield and a

sword in the battle with a foe that any "mature" person would never even

consider standing up against.



The level of techno-slang in Little Brother is just about right for someone

like me who browses the net every day, but considers "hacking" to be

something akin to VooDoo mysticism. I can't really say where the real

slang ends and the imaginary technology begins, but Doctorow has made

his book so believable, so real, that it doesn't matter. It all adds to the

feeling of imminent danger, of a future that could very well be now.



What I didn't like about Little Brother was the amount of explanation. I

realize the book is meant to be read by younger people, but even so the

info-dumps are just a bit too much, and some of them are situated at points

where the reader really expects the story to move. I don't mind a one-

sentence explanation of a term or concept, but two pages of crypto-theory

just puts a stopper on things.



This is a small problem though. All in all Little Brother is a great story of a

techno-age rebellion, one that I really empathised with, and with a main

character I thoroughly loved. It is a warning of what could very well already

be happening, but it is also a promise: that when it all goes wrong, it won't

be the Big, but the Little Brother - the Little Brothers - watching, and that

they will never let it happen without a fight. And if we could believe that -

well, then we are the Little Brothers.



9/10





[...]



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