Futureland consists of nine thematically linked short stories, sharing the same near future dystopia. One name for this might be hypercapitalism, as corporations basically run Earth and own virtually everything. No one owns a house, a car, or even their cloths-- they are all 'leased' as their is more profit that way. Further, this is also a hypersurveillance world, were everyone has a 'chip' and a card that can be monitored 24/7. Those unlucky if you will not to have a job are deemed 'cyclers' and subsist on rice and beans in underground hives until they can get work again.
Within this setting, each of the stories fleshes out some aspect of the world dominated by corporate abuse and a search for humanity, or what it means to be human. These stories are also very heavily racially charged as well, as most of the lead characters are black and on the fringes of racist society. The stories vary quite dramatically in length, from a few dozen pages to almost a hundred. I will not even try to summarize all nine stories here, however. Beyond sharing the same world, Furtureland also shares many of the same characters among the stories.
What I liked the most is the utter plausibility of the dystopia. Futureland is about 20 years old now, and due to things like the patriot act, along with social media and such, the monitoring aspect hits pretty close to home. The growth of corporate power and its influence in politics portrayed here is not here yet, but growing all the time. The precarious nature of employment is again, not quite what Mosley cast here, but not too far off either. Definitely a rather disturbing near future created by Mosley here, extrapolating from current social/economic/political trends. It is hard to really develop characters in short stories and alas, that is the weakness of the book. Mosley keeps hitting the reader with a bleak future where people still strive for independence and freedom in a racist world gone corporate. Overall, an engaging read, but not a happy one. 3 bleak stars.