Title: Little Brother (advance copy) Author: Cory Doctorow Year: 2008 Publisher: Tor Reviewer: Christian Ternus When Tor offered to send us an advance reading copy of Cory Doctorow's latest novel, "Little Brother," I was both excited and a little nervous. So many of the books that MITSFS receives fail to live up to their promise, and I've been severely underwhelmed in the past. My feelings were, shall we say, "cautiously optimistic." This book blew my expectations completely out of the water. It was the first novel that I've read since Stross' "Accelerando" that caused me to have to stand up and walk around a bit just to wrap my head around what I just read. Going in, I was expecting a novel of teenagers using technology to "stick it to the man." While that is essentially the case, it in no way captures what makes "Little Brother" different from any young-adult book I have ever read. At first, the book seemed to be following the traditional teen-awesome-hacker "War Games"-ish track that so many young-adult novels have taken in the past. Then Doctorow hit me with both barrels. Mea culpa, Cory, I'm sorry for having doubted you. The descriptions of high-school kids being rounded up, hooded, and transported to secret prisons in the wake of a terrorist attack are all the more frightening for how plausible Doctorow makes them sound. If you're someone who's either worried about the direction American civil liberties are going or who thinks "it can't happen here," I'd strongly encourage you to read this book. This book does an excellent job of debunking the all-to-prevalent notion of "If you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide." Like Neil Gaiman's cover quote says, I hope this book gets into the hands of as many smart young people as possible. Doctorow's latest novel resembles what you would get if you threw a coming-of-age novel into a blender along with Orwell's "1984," Neal Stephenson's "Cryptonomicon," the Bill of Rights, and a copy of the 9/11 Commission Report, then seasoned it with references to the civil-rights and anti-war movements of the 60s and 70s and with a hearty dose of Californian life. I'll freely admit that as a relatively young, D&D-playing, video-gaming, LARPing, science-fiction-obsessed computer-science major/political science minor, I may not be representative of the average audience for this book. For me, though, this book hit all the right buttons, and while I enjoyed it immensely, this is the sort of book that I would have absolutely loved as a high-schooler. As it is, this book was at times exciting, funny, touching, thought-provoking, and more than a little frightening; and really, what more can you ask? In conclusion, Doctorow's latest novel is one of the best new books I've read in a long time. Unless you have a strong allergy to Young Adult books, go out and pick up a copy. Even though Doctorow is releasing the book for free on his website (craphound.com) under a Creative Commons license, I know I'll be buying my own.