Here are my reviews of every short story with the overall at the end.
P1: Tommy Longhorn- Not a fan of alien stories. I'm surprised the collection about critiquing America started with this. 1/5
P2: Amber's Son- "They were just kids when their captain, Heather's Son, yelled, 'attack!'" God. This is more like what I was expecting. The layers to this one. Children fighting war adults sent them too, everyone being their mother's child instead of their own names to show all soliders are someone's kids and helpless to the decisions of their leaders. I sincerely think I will never forget this short story. 5/5
P3: A Million Times Over Again- This one definitely wasn't my favorite. The ending, however, was quite touching. 2/5
P4: It Was Just Another Day in America- Oh... Oh that's enough to make me tear up. 5/5
P5: Preparing to Die- I think this story has a lot less effect on me since I've never had to make arrangements before/after a death before. Still, it's unsettling to see how streamlined it is in this story. 3/5
P6: The Crumbling of a Nation- Good. Let himself feel guilt. Also love that this is halfway through the book. Feels like it's symbolic events coming half way to fruition. 4/5
P7: The Termination Bureau- Handmaid's Tale-esk, if not somehow worse (not the writing. The writing was great. The treatment of human beings being the worse thing). Love that he chose to have this take place in Florida, and all the talk of citizenship makes me wonder what would have happened if Jocelyn or her father weren't citizens. 5/5
P8: A Baby is Born- We love corporate America! 5/5
P9: Love, the Way God Intended- I frankly don't have the energy to write things right now. It's good. 4/5
P10: We See You- Harrowing and disturbing. The bystander effect is terrifying. 5/5
P11: The Unknown Writer- Poor guy. 2/5
P12: Bye, Bye Sadness- I doubt other big corporate CEOs have this sort of guilt, but I wish they did. 5/5
P13: Ch1-3 of In the Algorithm We Trust- My curiosity is piqued and I need to know more. 5/5
Overall: I averaged everything to get the rating of a 3.9. 4/5 stars! This book is very haunting, considering the current state of the world in multiple ways. Ginsberg encapsulates so many issues we face, or are on the cusp of facing, and doesn't sugar coat a bit of it. I can't wait to read Ginsberg's full novel of In the Algorithm We Trust!