In the world of Feed , 73% of Americans have a "feed"—a neural implant that allows direct, instantaneous access to the internet, entertainment, and telepathic messaging (chatting). This is not just a tool; it is a permanent sensory layer that filters reality through a lens of and corporate interests . Key Themes and Cultural Critiques Why it works: "Feed" by M.T. Anderson - Nathan Bransford

M.T. Anderson’s 2002 novel is a hauntingly prescient masterpiece of dystopian fiction that serves as a visceral critique of consumerism, corporate overreach, and the slow erosion of human agency. Though written before the era of smartphones and social media algorithms, its portrayal of a society literally hard-wired into a digital marketplace remains one of the most accurate forecasts of our modern digital condition. The Core Concept: A Neural Internet