Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

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(Paperback - REPRINT)

Reader Rating: (134 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Permanent Library" See All

  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: October 2006
  • ISBN-13: 9780060850524
  • Sales Rank: 1,217
  • 288pp
  • Series: P.S.
  • Edition Description: REPRINT
 
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Synopsis

Huxley´s vision of the future in his astonishing 1931 novel Brave New World -- a world of tomorrow in which capitalist civilization has been reconstituted through the most efficient scientific and psychological engineering.

New York Times Book Review

Huxley uses his erudite knowledge of human relations to compare our actual world with his prophetic fantasy of 1931. It is a frightening experience, indeed, to discover how much of his satirical prediction of a distant future became reality in so short a time.

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Biography

Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) was born in Surrey, England, and is the author of many critically acclaimed books of fiction and nonfiction, including Crome Yellow, The Doors of Perception, and Island.

Customer Reviews

Interesting and impressive Book from before the 1950sby Anonymous

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August 26, 2008: 'Brave New World', written by Aldous Huxley, was an interesting book that gave me a very strong impression even from the first few chapters. The book starts of in a place where humans are born through machine. Experts explain the process being very efficient since it creates mass numbers of humans and can also distinguish them through different class by teaching them from very young age. Of course, they talk about babies being 'cloned' and therefore having multiple people with same faces and appearance as if it was nothing abnormal. As a reader of course, these information were very shocking. First because the information that these people in the book were giving contained abnormal contents but the characters in the book talked as if it was normal in their society. Second, because an author from year before the 1950 had already thought about development of technology of genetics. The book clearly shows the deep thought of Aldous Huxley in his view of future. As technologies developed, it has become clear that technology has changed the way people think. One of my friend mentioned to me that suicides were not as common in the past as they were now. Technology has brought humans comfort in their lives, but they had to pay a price of emotional sufferings. Aldous huxley depicts this society where technology is thriving and is everywhere in people??s lives. However, the society has also used technologies to get rid of potential causes of emotional sufferings for human. People are somehow brained washed from the point that they are born, and are made to believe and think in only one specific way, which was to follow the expectations of society. Story is told from couple of points of view. Aldous Huxley probably wrote the book in such way to present multiple ways of viewing the society. There were people who loved the way society world and people who disliked the society. In these ways, Aldous Huxley does a fine job presenting his own thought of the future society. A society that has gone rapid changes not only in technologies but in the mental mind of humans.

Interesting point of view regarding our futureby Anonymous

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November 19, 2007: I particularly liked this novel, because the author has a great deal of imagination to create a dystopia which might also be considered as an outlook into our future.


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