Future Organized Crime Sells Chocolate Bars

Gabrielle Zevin is an American author who lives in Los Angeles. All These Things I’ve Done is considered a young adult romance with a near-future setting and was listed in multiple magazines and reading lists soon after it was first published in 2011.

In 2083, chocolate and all forms of caffeine are illegal and controlled by organized crime. This future version of New York strictly regulates everyday life, including requiring postage for email.

A teenage girl named Anya balances the politics of her Russian-American organized crime family while trying to protect them, whether they need or want her help: her dying grandmother, her sister, who is intellectually gifted, and her brother, who has a traumatic brain injury. That’s all while she faces the consequences of a murder charge or two while trying to avoid being expelled from Catholic school.

This first installment of a multi-book series provides a sweeping overview of fictionalized distribution networks, politics and organized crime without completely shocking most adults or older teens. Given different motives of threat actors, such as organized crime syndicates, this inside look of fictionalized crime may inspire cybersecurity professionals and some of their family members. For readers willing to ignore inconsistencies, some of the topics in this book could be a launching point for talking about physical security, trust and other security topics.


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