
NPR's Book of the Day 'The Definitions' features dorm room conversation – with a dystopian twist
Jan 12, 2026
Matt Greene, a novelist known for exploring language and sociopolitical themes, dives into his new novel, The Definitions. He shares how a pandemic and fears of authoritarianism influenced his portrayal of a dystopian dorm life where students have lost their memories. Greene discusses parenting and the social dynamics of children, while also critiquing the re-education camp-like setting of The Centre. He highlights the philosophical limits of language and leaves the narrative open-ended, prompting readers to find their own meanings.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Language Disconnect Fuels Authoritarian Drift
- Greene links contemporary political shifts to a widening disconnect between language and meaning in society.
- He suggests this
Inspiration From His Son's First Day
- Matt Greene was inspired by watching his eldest son start school and observed how social hierarchies form quickly among children.
- This personal observation led him to imagine a school setting where nameless students rapidly develop social structures after memory loss.
A School That Rewrites Identity
- Students arrive nameless and receive names from recognizable cultural cartridges, highlighting manufactured identity.
- The Centre presents as a convalescent facility but functions as a re-education camp shaping political ideology.




