Hum

Hum

Helen Phillips

Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

From the National Book Award–longlisted author of The Need comes an extraordinary novel about a wife and mother who—after losing her job to AI—undergoes a procedure that renders her undetectable to surveillance…but at what cost? In a city addled by climate change and populated by intelligent robots called “hums,” May loses her job to artificial intelligence. In a desperate bid to resolve her family’s debt and secure their future for another few months, she becomes a guinea pig in an experiment that alters her face so it cannot be recognized by surveillance. Seeking some reprieve from her recent hardships and from her family’s addiction to their devices, she splurges on passes that allow them three nights’ respite inside the Botanical Garden: a rare green refuge where forests, streams, and animals flourish. But her insistence that her son, daughter, and husband leave their devices at home proves far more fraught than she anticipated, and the lush beauty of the Botanical Garden is not the balm she hoped it would be. When her children come under threat, May is forced to put her trust in a hum of uncertain motives as she works to restore the life of her family. Written in taut, urgent prose, Hum is a work of speculative fiction that unflinchingly explores marriage, motherhood, and selfhood in a world compromised by global warming and dizzying technological advancement, a world of both dystopian and utopian possibilities. As New York Times bestselling author Jeff VanderMeer says, “Helen Phillips, in typical bravura fashion, has found a way to make visible uncomfortable truths about our present by interrogating the near-future.”


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  • lilbaldie
    Mar 22, 2025
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

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  • seaniewho
    Mar 09, 2025
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  • sarai
    Dec 17, 2024
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:

    3.75 ⭐ Firstly, the writing in Hum is fantastic - the author is able to evoke such a feeling of dread and anxiety and confusion that I had to take a couple days break after Part 2 because I was genuinely anxious. I could feel May's desire to give her children the life she felt they deserved, while restricted so heavily by the world around her - between finances, the state of the world, the environmental crisis, everything was against her in different ways, making her feel like she was failing as a mother and partner. 

    Some spoilerly thoughts: 
    • <spoiler>Phillips did a phenomenally earie job in demonstrating how freely and openly society judges and villainizes mothers in moments of hardship in parenthood, while father's so rarely feel this judgement and scrutiny despite frequently being involved in those moments just as much as the mother. 
    • After the incident, I couldn't help but agree with how thoroughly May wanted to protect Lu and Sy from every possible instance where they (or their DNA) could be accessed by someone other than herself. That protective instinct going into overdrive when her brain recognized a threat. 
    • Jem and May's relationship throughout the book was so raw and realistic, each of them just wanting to be better for each other and their children while at the same time unsure of how to just exist together during their struggles. 
    • What the hell is horsie go round??</spoiler>

    Ultimately, a creepy creepy book with some seriously good writing. 

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