I got Ayn Rand's Anthem for Christmas! I fell in love with this book. I read the whole thing in one night because I couldn't put it down. The dystopian genre is one of the coolest I know. It took me a long time, but I read George Orwell's 1984 which is similar because it is also dystopian (I own three copies of this book, and they were all gifts).
A great short story inspired by 1984 is Kurt Vonnegut's Harrison Bergeron. It's even shorter than Anthem, so if you liked Anthem at all, you should definitely try Harrison Bergeron.
Here is a link to the full text, which is really short, so you have no excuse not to read it:Harrison Bergeron
An author once told me that we read for one of two reasons: we either read outward, or we read inward.
Stories about science fiction or fantasy and whatnot usually make us read outward by bringing our minds to wild, imaginative, complex, and fake places. These would be stories like Star Wars or The Lord of the Rings.
Other stories have us read inward to contemplate ourselves as moral human beings with feelings, how we interact with other people or with society, or why we exist at all. Stories like this include Carson McCullers' The Member of the Wedding or James Joyce's The Dead.
To be fair, some stories accomplish both inward and outward reading, such as M.T. Anderson's Feed. Feed is based in the future where flying cars and space travel are common occurrences, but these exciting innovations are not the focus of the story. Technology's tightening grasp on humanity and how it affects our lives for better or for worse drive the story. This book will change your life.
Sometimes I really like to read outward, and sometimes inward. The great thing about English is that both of these are found in any kind of literature: novel, poem, comic, song, short story, play, and so on.




