

Homeland
Author: Cory Doctorow
Series: Little Brother Series #1
Narrator: Wil Wheaton
Unabridged: 11 hr 51 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Cory Doctorow
Published: 05/01/2014
Author: Cory Doctorow
Series: Little Brother Series #1
Narrator: Wil Wheaton
Unabridged: 11 hr 51 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Cory Doctorow
Published: 05/01/2014
Cory Doctorow is a blogger, journalist, and author science fiction and nonfiction. His writing has won numerous awards, including three Locus Awards, two John W. Campbell Awards, three Prometheus Awards, two Sunburst Awards, the White Pine Award, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award, among others. He has served as Canadian regional director of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. He is coeditor of the blog Boing Boing, and he was named one of the web’s twenty-five “influencers” by Forbes and a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum. He is a contributing author to Wired magazine, and his writing has been published in the New York Times Sunday Magazine, the Globe and Mail, the Boston Globe, Popular Science, and others.
Wil Wheaton is an award–winning actor, voice artist, author, and audiobook narrator. Among his movie credits are Stand by Me and Toy Soldiers. His many television credits include Star Trek: The Next Generation, The Big Bang Theory, and Generator Rex. As a narrator of more than a dozen audiobooks, he has twice won the prestigious Audie Award, twice been a finalist for the Audie, and earned an Earphones Award from AudioFile magazine.
Well crap. Once again Doctorow paints a pretty grim and believable picture of what happens when we allow our rights to privacy, autonomy and freedom of expression to be circumscribed in the name of "safety" and "protection." The most disturbing thing about the potential of this tale to become realit......more
I should never start a Doctorow book in the evening because I will surely be up all night alternately reading and pacing and Googling and despairing and hoping. This sequel to Little Brother is splendid. The technology bits make me frightened and determined to learn more. The story is gripping, the p......more
Not AS strong as Little Brother, but still a decent read. A year or two after the events of Little Brother, California is bankrupt (isn't it always?) and now nineteen-year-old Marcus Yallow is a college drop-out, still living with his unemployed parents, supported by his father's severance pay, and j......more
At first I refused to believe this book was a YA novel, and consequently disliked it. I cracked this open as part of a book club assignment -- I hadn't read any of Doctorow's other fiction. I knew that the first book in this series, Little Brother, had been billed as a YA novel. But isn't that just......more
This is the second volume in a series set is modern day alt-reality USA. The first book, Little Brother, was written as a standalone and was nominated for both Hugo and Nebula (as well as other SFF awards). I’ve read it in 2020 and really enjoyed the story and the style, here is my review. The third......more
“Cory Doctorow’s stand-alone sequel to his top-selling Little Brother exhibits the same high-tech hipness, fast-breaking action, and looming suspense as that series starter.” Barnes & Noble, editorial review
“While Doctorow is known as a sci-fi writer, none of the science or technology here is fictional, so the story hits close to home. The author combines excitement, romance, humor, and geekery with challenging questions for readers. Anyone concerned about the future of information should read this book.” School Library Journal (starred review)
“Doctorow sends readers into a world of Darknet secret web sites, Occupy protests, kidnapping and interrogation, and hacking. The narrative is threaded with geek teen culture, economic problems, election strategy, corporate greed, government conspiracies, and privacy issues, and technology nerds will eat this for breakfast with a cup of really good coffee.” Booklist (starred review)
“In this rousing sequel to Little Brother, Marcus has gone to college, dropped out, and is looking for a job—no easy task in this near-future America’s worsening recession…As always, Doctorow fills his novel with cutting-edge technology, didactic progressive messages, strong and somewhat snarky characters, and discursions that reflect his passions (a Wil Wheaton cameo? instructions on cold-brewing coffee? why not?). Fans of Little Brother and the author’s other stories of technophiliac hacktivism ought to love this book.” Publishers Weekly