
A Companion to Friedrich Nietzsche: Life and Works
Book
Nietzsche looms over modern literature and thought; according to Gottfried Benn, "everything my...

Positive Computing: Technology for Wellbeing and Human Potential
Rafael A. Calvo and Dorian Peters
Book
On the eve of Google's IPO in 2004, Larry Page and Sergey Brin vowed not to be evil. Today, a...

Eldridge Plays: 2: Incomplete and Random Acts of Kindness, Market Boy, the Knot of the Heart, the Stock Da'wa: 2
Book
This second collection of plays by David Eldridge showcases the development of one of the most...

Refugee Economies: Forced Displacement and Development
Alexander Betts, Josiah Kaplan, Louise Bloom and Naohiko Omata
Book
Refugees have rarely been studied by economists. Despite some pioneering research on the economic...

Chloë McTaggart (48 KP) rated The Circle in Books
Oct 19, 2018
Despite being set in a dystopian world full of technology we currently only see on the Syfy channel, it somehow clings to our ideas of reality and what is possible. By doing this, it soon offers a dangerous look at what technology may become as it highlights the impact it already has on our lives. The protagonist, Mae, lands a job at a technology company named “The Circle” which is comparable to brands and companies such as Apple, Google and Samsung. Eggers takes the ideas of the main technological companies of the twenty first century and rolls them into one; producing an unstoppable powerhouse of sharing, transparency and sociability overseen by a trinity of male bosses that we never really connect to. While Eggers sets the scene, and development of society, through his use of The Circle as an interdimensional power house, he fails to develop a relatable character in his protagonist.
From the start of the book the protagonist, Mae, comes across as weak and unmotivated with some parts of the novel serving almost as a pity party for her. If she’s not complaining, she’s raving about ex-boyfriends or how hard a life she has as though she’s the only one in the world that matters - though I suppose to Eggers she is the most important. Through this self pity, the reader struggles to find a point of contact with Mae; she offers no escape from the real world and instead becomes a motivation to stop reading the novel.
However, despite the lack of character development, the novel does raise relevant questions concerning technology and social media. In the film adaptation, it serves to show us just how much of an impact we can have on others without realising it; and how even when we do realise it the popularity or reward is too enticing to stop.

Portfolio for iPad
Photo & Video and Productivity
App
Portfolio offers a self-contained, brandable presentation tool for your business. Once set up, it...

BrainWave Tuner - Binaural beats & white noise
Health & Fitness and Medical
App
***29 + preset brainwave patterns. Nominated as ‘Best Healthcare and Fitness App’ by Handango....

Certified Nurse Educator Q&A Review
Medical and Education
App
*** Named a 2015 "Book of the Year - Electronic Media" by the American Journal of Nursing *** ...
Thomas Sankara: An African Revolutionary
Book
Thomas Sankara, often called the African Che Guevara, was president of Burkina Faso, one of the...

Topics in Banach Space Theory: 2016
Fernando Albiac and Nigel J. Kalton
Book
This text provides the reader with the necessary technical tools and background to reach the...