Agent: Russell Galen, Scovil Galen Ghosh Literary Agency. Fans of Little Brother and the author’s other stories of technophiliac hacktivism ought to love this book. 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?). Returning to San Francisco, Marcus finds his dream job working for an honest politician and must decide whether to make public the explosive data, while dodging Johnstone and her goons. Immediately thereafter, she is kidnapped by Carrie Johnstone, the über-competent mercenary who is determined to reacquire the data stick and protect her clients. Like most Doctorow novels, Homeland is one third entertainment, one third education about the state and direction of technologys influence on us, and one third. While attending the spectacular Burning Man festival, Marcus and his girlfriend run into Masha, a secret agent he met three years earlier she hands him a data stick filled with governmental and corporate dirty secrets, telling him to release it if she disappears. 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. Cory Doctorow, Homeland 3 likes Like These guys are the world’s biggest welfare queens, after allsuck up government money in military contracts, use it to issue bonds, get the government to pass laws that make your bonds into safer bets, then go after even bigger and better laws.
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