Feed Resources
Websites
Check out our author's official website, complete with cool steampunk intro. There's a whole page for Feed.
Units and unettes, you won't want to miss this meg brag wordbook that'll help you work your way through this totally un-null book.
If you liked Feed, you'll love NPR's M. T. Anderson page, with descriptions of his other award-winning YA books.
You probably won't be surprised to know that Feedhas been banned in a couple of school districts for controversial and inappropriate material. Take a look at the various opinions that parents (and kids) have about this novel. Which side do you fall on?
Articles and Interviews
Anderson gives us the skinny on his novel Feed. Don't miss his comments about banned books.
Get the lowdown on several of Anderson's novels here. Plus: what a cool author! Not only did he agree to an interview with this blogger, but he actually came to visit her in the library where she works.
Heavy-hitter Publisher's Weekly gives their thumbs-up for this novel.
The folks at Kirkus review the novel.
For your linguistic pleasure, an article on what's going on with language use in the novel. Courtesy of a blog called "Literary Ashland."
Video and Audio
The units and unettes at AdLit.org interview our author, who dishes on reading, writing, and research—all geared to the teen perspective. Stick around for his point about trusting too much on Internet research at around 2:50. Does this sound suspiciously like the Titus's reliance on the feed?
Get lost in the feed and check out these student book trailers for Feed. Maybe it'll inspire you to make your own?
TeachingBooks.net gives us this neat audio of Anderson talking about Feed and reading from his work. A clue: he thinks we're not far off from what he depicts in the book. (When you hear "feed chatter," think "channel surfing.")
Images
Here's the book cover you'll usually see. Those scrolling words sure look like a feed, don't they?
Wonder how long that sucker takes to charge up? We sure hope the battery life is better than our Nexus 5.
Is that a tweed jacket we see on M. T. Anderson? He'll be dancing with ripplechicks and zooming around on a jetpack in no time.
Check out this nifty artistic vision of the feed.