The Every

A novel

Paperback, 608 pages

Published Nov. 16, 2021 by Vintage.

ISBN:
978-0-593-31534-7
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3 stars (12 reviews)

A conscientious objector to surveillance capitalism plans to battle the world’s largest social network/e-commerce/monitoring company, The Every, by joining it and monkey wrenching it from the inside.

3 editions

Review of 'The Every' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Liked The Circle and this one is funnier and still thought-provoking but didn't really work for me as a whole. Too many ideas don't go anywhere and the ones that get repeated seem like freakouts about millenial wokeness that are too close to comedian's cancel culture complaints to be good parody.

reviewed The Every by Dave Eggers

The Every

No rating

He’s acutely aware of the confusion surrounding one of MoviePass 2.0’s biggest innovations: a new feature called PreShow that will play ads on users’ phones in exchange for credits toward the purchase of movie tickets. PreShow’s facial-recognition technology tracks people’s eyeballs to ensure subscribers are really watching — as opposed to putting their phones on the sofa and walking away

MoviePass 2.0 Wants (to Sell) Your Attention by Chris Lee in Vulture, 2022 Mar 11

Delaney Wells got screen-addicted in her early teens, but recovered. Her parents’ health-food store was driven out of business by a national chain acquired by the jungle, the world’s biggest on-line department store. Delaney becomes a foe of the source of these problems: the Every, a merger of the jungle and the Cirlce, the world’s largest social-media/indexing service. She wants freedom from the Every, and schemes for a decade to join the Every and destroy …

Review of 'The Every' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I hated this book and I should have known that I would because I didn't like [b:The Circle|18302455|The Circle|Dave Eggers|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1376419833l/18302455.SX50.jpg|25791820] either, but I thought I just read The Circle with too much sincerity because I didn't realize at the time Dave Eggers was a satirist. Since then, I also tried to read [b:The Captain and the Glory|51792305|The Captain and the Glory|Dave Eggers|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1569893153l/51792305.SX50_SY75.jpg|73423793], which I absolutely hated and didn't finish. I still gave this a shot and would probably liked it if it had 1) been shorter or 2) had a more satisfying plot. I'm not sure I disagree with all of the apps Eggers came up with that were supposed to be outlandish, but maybe I'm just proving his point that nothing can surprise us sheep and we're all doomed.

burning man was better 20 years ago

2 stars

the first 100 pages felt like a laundry list of Dave egger’s boomery gripes about San Francisco. then it became more like a Black Mirror episode, you know, what if technology but bad. still, I kept reading. What can I say, it was entertaining.

then today I saw an ad for something that uses “ai” to manage your calendar for you and now I don’t know what to think

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