Brave New World
1932 · Aldous Huxley · 288 pages · Dystopian Fiction
Brave New World is one of those rare novels where the ideas have only grown sharper with age. Written in 1932, it predicted a world numbed by pleasure, distraction, and engineered consent with an accuracy that still catches people off guard. The characters are thin, the pacing drags in stretches, and Huxley's prose keeps you at arm's length when you want to be pulled in. None of that has stopped the book from becoming essential reading for anyone interested in where technology, entertainment, and social control intersect. Its vision of a society that chose comfort over freedom remains one of fiction's most uncomfortable mirrors.