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Munmun
Munmun
Munmun
Audiobook9 hours

Munmun

Written by Jesse Andrews

Narrated by Andrew Eiden

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

In an alternate reality a lot like our world, every person's physical size is directly proportional to their wealth. The poorest of the poor are the size of rats, and billionaires are the size of skyscrapers.

Warner and his sister Prayer are destitute-and tiny. Their size is not just demeaning, but dangerous: day and night they face mortal dangers that bigger, richer people don't ever have to think about, from being mauled by cats to their house getting stepped on. There are no cars or phones built small enough for them, or schools or hospitals, for that matter-there's no point, when no one that little has any purchasing power, and when salaried doctors and teachers would never fit in buildings so small. Warner and Prayer know their only hope is to scale up, but how can two littlepoors survive in a world built against them?

A brilliant, warm, funny trip, unlike anything else out there, and a social novel for our time in the tradition of 1984 or Invisible Man. Inequality is made intensely visceral by an adventure and tragedy both hilarious and heartbreaking.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 22, 2018
ISBN9781977384973
Munmun

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Reviews for Munmun

Rating: 4.085365685365853 out of 5 stars
4/5

41 ratings11 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    the socio-political messages aren't even thinly veiled, they aren't veiled at all. I like the writing style though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Such a fun and imaginative romp into a strange weird almost believable world.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love it when a book can surprise me - both in where the story goes as well as explaining something I think I already know in a way that I never would have expected. This book did both. I love the explanation of math on pages 211 and 212 of the hardcover book. Warner explains that the imaginary number "i" is a moaning groaning mathghost. I love that!I also loved that Warner really wanted to make things better for everyone, not just himself. Because of that, I can't say I liked how the book ended. But I won't say how the book did end. I loved that heros and villains came in all sizes.This was such a great satire on how unfair life is. If you are born to a family with education and at least a modest income, your life will be much better, regardless of the effort you put into it than it will be for someone who is born to poor and uneducated parents, regardless of how much effort they put in.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Brilliantly-written satire that is also truly fun to read? Munmun is funny, heartbreaking, strange, and poignant. Andrews uses language to illustrate the lack of literacy of the protagonist, Warner, who is a charming narrator I enjoyed following through the surreal landscape of the Yewess, the setting of the novel, and the dreamworld that serves as a type of shared VR. Andrews lambastes socioeconomic strata and thumbs Warner's littlepoor nose at anyone who would try to pity him.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Inequality takes the form of size with the littlepoor being as small as rats and the bigrich as big as whales. Scaled by logarithmic amounts of munmun for each doubling of size. Warner and his sister seek to better themselves in a world were stepping on a little causes no consequence and attacking a big gets a little sentenced to a decade in a rat cage of a prison. This is a quirky dark, angry book with flashes of spiky humor. There was no good way to end the story, is the main problem - after Warner survives one semi-self-inflicted disaster after another.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is set in a future where how much money you have (munmun) dictates how big you are. Average people are normal scale, those richer are bigger, those poorer are smaller. half scale are middle poor, the poorest of them all are the littlepoors. They're small enough that the perils of being a cat's plaything are a serious concern. Narrated in the first person by a teenage Warner, who is a littlepoor, it tells of his and his sister's lives as they leave home and attempt to scale up. The book feels as if it is aimed at the teen market. The way that it touches on but then seems to shy away from the few political points that are raised make me think that's the target market. I think I'd have found it more meaningful had the philosophy been expanded a little more. There are several things that this book does very well. The first is that while it asks you to take one leap of faith (that your size can scale with your bank account) everything else in the book remains self consistent. This is my major bugbear with some lazy science fiction, that it requires multiple leaps of scientific faith for the universe that is imagined to hold true. This doesn't fall into that trap. Along the way it manages to make you think about what would the perils of being small or large actually be? What would the world look and feel like if you were small? Very different, that is forsure. It also invents a language that is not entirely unlike yoofspeak, which I will admit, it took me a while to get my head around in some cases. But as I'm not now and never have been down wiv da kids, I think I'm excused having to think this through a few times! US has mutated into Yewess. I couldn't work out where Lossy Indica was supposed to be though. This is not a book I would have picked up myself, it was a book subscription, so I like to think it was picked with some confidence that I might enjoy it. I did enjoy it, although I thought the ending quite disappointing, in a way. My hesitations over science fiction (for the reasons outlined above) remain. However this is a good example of the genre and one that I'm pleased was picked for me.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a totally different world where people's size depended on how much money they had. They would scale up or down depending on their financial stability. Our hero is a littlepoor, the smallest and poorest of all. He wants to get bigger but the system is against littles getting bigger. There are some interesting economics lessons to be learned in the book, mostly about how eradicating the biggest people are not always in everyone's best interest.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Think Borrowers for the 21st century, think Honey I Shrunk the Kids, think Downsizing, think Gulliver's Travels and you might get a vague flavour of this highly original novel from Jesse Andrews. You can enjoy it on a simple level as a tale of trying to succeed when the odds are stacked against you or you can delve a little deeper and see the work as a satirical and quite savage indictment of the age we live in.Andrews has created a whole dystopian landscape with the city of Lossy Indica in the Yewess where size is proportionate to wealth, i.e. the smaller you are the poorer you are. However it is possible to scale up with the acquisition of more wealth - munmun. Warner and his sister Prayer are Littlepoors who feel their only hope of a safer, securer future is to scale up. But they need……munmun.Warner is the main protagonist, a complex character and it is through him that our knowledge and understanding of the fantasy landscape is furthered. There is Dreamworld and Lifeanddeathworld. And what goes on in both is pretty mind boggling!! There are parallels with our own contemporary world though which makes the story pretty chilling at times. Whilst the author and the setting are American and many of the references are culturally and socially applicable to that nation there are many universal observances here that can resonate with an international audience. It is an inventive and witty book. Andrews has created a unique vernacular by spelling out acronyms and fusing words together, creating verbs from nouns - US becomes Yewess, byanychance, backyarding! Genius! and I haven’t used the best ones as examples for I would consider that to be a spoiler! And then there’s the title itself! But if you love words and word play this aspect of the book will appeal.I suspect this may be a Marmite book. I can kind of get that it will too much for some people and I’ve already seen some reviews that are calling it ‘weird’. But those who stick with it and allow themselves and their imaginations to become enveloped by this world will delight in the unusual story and the perceptive observations of our current society that are given an almost cartoon like or caricatured visual word treatment. I loved it! But then I’m weird!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    MUNMUN by Jesse Andrews is a quirky, imaginative young adult fantasy exploring social issues ranging from wealth to inequality.Designed for mature teens, the story is set in an alternative reality where a person’s physical size is proportional to their money known as munmun. Warner and his sister Prayer are the size of a squirrel, while the rich may be the size of large buildings. The story follows Warner’s personal growth, literally.Librarians will find an audience among teens who enjoy dystopian fantasy with a social message. From the unusual vocabulary to the wacky world building, Andrews’ approach isn’t for everyone. However, it’s perfect for those seeking a thought-provoking, humorous, face-paced read.Published on April 3, 2018 by Harry N. Abrams. ARC courtesy of the publisher.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In an alternate reality a lot like our world, every person’s physical size is directly proportional to their wealth. The poorest of the poor are the size of rats, and billionaires are the size of skyscrapers.Warner and his sister Prayer are destitute—and tiny. Their size is not just demeaning, but dangerous: day and night they face mortal dangers that bigger richer people don’t ever have to think about, from being mauled by cats to their house getting stepped on. There are no cars or phones built small enough for them, or schools or hospitals, for that matter—there’s no point, when no one that little has any purchasing power, and when salaried doctors and teachers would never fit in buildings so small. Warner and Prayer know their only hope is to scale up, but how can two littlepoors survive in a world built against them?A brilliant, warm, funny trip, unlike anything else out there, and a social novel for our time in the tradition of 1984 or Invisible Man. Inequality is made intensely visceral by an adventure and tragedy both hilarious and heartbreaking.Out April 2018 MY THOUGHTS:I received this book in exchange for my honest review.I’ve heard so much about this author and his work that I needed to get a copy of this book to review. I’m glad I did.Andrews has managed to create something that hasn’t been done before in the YA genre. If you can get past the syntax, acronyms that are spelled out, and a whole new style of grammar, then you’ve unlocked the door to the world of “Munmun.”Although incredibly weird and even deemed odd by many, Andrews has created an amazing world that mirrors many of the social and economic struggles of our own world. This is what makes his writing a well-written masterpiece!I did struggle with Warner’s story being told in first-person, but that’s just me, I’m not partial to first-person narrative. However, Andrews pulls this off without deflecting from the story pace. I still remained engaged and eager to see what he’d written next. The best advice I can offer someone considering reading this book: stay open-minded and receptive to a writing form you’ve not seen before.Some may call it juvenile, others may call it a disaster– I call it BRILLIANT!There are surprising gems of humor found when certain characters interact which I thought to be creative tools used by the author to keep the reader engaged when plot and pace slowed slightly. These moments ushered the reader forward and back in to the action and gave the character another chink in its arc development. Truly clever!Fiction mirrors reality during some of the more brutal and awful moments in the book, and Andrews most certainly refuses to hold your hand through them, but the voice of the author and overall ‘feel’ does manage to soften the impact somewhat, allowing the reader to digest the information presented and move forward. Another masterful technique used by the author to push the plot along.The impact of the social and political bards are beneficial to the story in that they show a direct statement about what is often poo-poo’ed by society today. Although done in a caricature fashion where the poor are tiny, overlooked and ignore, the rich are larger than life itself and achieve everything, you can’t help but see the irony in the author’s use of said imagery.Satirical yet brilliant! The author has taken how he sees the world and used this reflection to voice his own sardonic aptitude in a book delivering a loud message. There are far more ‘minions’ than giants and if united… one has to wonder about the outcome. Reminds me of the blockbuster children’s movie, “A Bug’s Life,” where a colony of ants were bullied in to gathering food for a nasty band of grasshoppers who were too lazy to gather their own (like the children’s nursery story too). When the ants united and refused to allow the grasshoppers to continue bullying them, the grasshoppers didn’t stand a chance because they were out numbered, hence — united we stand??!! lol who knows.This book is many things, some positive and some not so much, but it certainly doesn’t conform to what is considered ‘proper’ when writing fiction. Rather, it’s a dynamic, original breach of fiction normalcy worthy of becoming a classical paradox about a pariah in a fantastical world.Because of the complexities of the main character, Andrews obviously realized he needed to keep the other characters ‘down.’ In other words, he needed to keep the developing arc of the main character the center of the story without adding distractions created by other arcs. I believe this to be an ingenious structuring ploy, and because of the writing complexities, it manages to keep the focus where it needs to be. I think if he created complex character arcs of the secondary characters, these arcs would take away from the writing. The story-line continuously develops through the driving force of the main character’s growing arc, and in doing so, drives the story forward to it’s conclusion. I don’t think the story would work if done any other way. The developing character arc is almost a living entity of its own, and in effect, takes on the job usually reserved for secondary characters–that of pushing the MC along to achieving his plot goals.Because the whole story is laced with satire, I think if anything, it’s here where the author fell short in achieving his goals. At times, one could say the satire becomes too much or drags on, however, I didn’t really see this as a huge hindrance worthy of demoting the book. I think what the author did achieve far surpasses any huge criticism anyone may have about satire and its use.Lots of tongue-in-cheek references that could mirror today’s political ‘giants’ are seen here and there throughout the story, and I laughed out loud at how the author had fun with these particular satirical moments, shading the inferences enough to keep things funny and not turn the reader off or feel their own political views were being slighted or attacked.“Kick em while he’s down” is definitely how Warner is treated, an interesting paradox that also reflects how many minorities are treated in our own society. Andrews cleverly shows social viewpoints on caste systems that make the ‘whole picture’ absolutely horrifying. His mirroring world is also governed and driven by the motto, that the amount of money you own decides your value to society.Andrews driving wit, charm and clarity along with his classic method of storytelling oozes from the pages of Munmun, and I can’t emphasize enough how important it is for all to read this book, or, you’ll miss out on something unique.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Let me start by saying how much I disliked this book. Very much!!!In the exaggerated alternative reality of LifeandDeathWorld in the Yewess, a person's body size is directly proportional to the amount of munmun in their 'scale' bank account. Warner and his fifteen year old sister, Prayer, have no munmun, are littlepoor, tenthscale, rat sized. Their father was accidentally crushed to death by a middlerich, double scale kid. A cat pounced on their mother, breaking her spine. While middleriches and littlepoors rarely interact in the LifeandDeathWorld, the dichotomy between them vanishes in Dreamworld, where they can interact as equals. Having no prospects, Prayer must use her cuteness to make a middlerich boy fall in love with and marry her and share his munmun, allowing her to 'Scale Up' financially and physically. Where better to find one than in law school, even though Prayer is illiterate. Thus the pair, along with their friend Usher, make the laborious journey, especially given their size. When they arrive, however, the littlepoors are taunted, stifling their hopes. In MunMun, Jesse Andrews takes a swipe at today’s economic and political climate. He parodies the outlandish lifestyles of the supersized superrich contrasted with that of the destitute tiny ultrapoor. He amplifies the plight of the ultrapoor and ex-convicts who cannot advance out of their station due to educational and societal constraints and stereotypes. The Yewess is a unique world with a unique language. While MunMun is sure to get a lot of buzz, it is a difficult, slogging read and its appeal will largely be alternate reality and dystopian enthusiasts.