This book has NO business being as good as it is! What nerve! The gall! First of all, it contains such timely, trendy, and relevant subject matter — the tradwife movement, social media and influencing, streaming “reality,” family vlogging, being Extremely Online, internet subcultures, conspiracy theories, trolling and cyberabuse, political and cultural divides centered around social and identity issues, etc. — that it did not even NEED to be good to draw an intrigued audience. Even doubters would likely have been curious about it! Second, this book has accordingly been super-hyped in advance of release: however do you live up to such hype?! Third, there is such a GLUT of fashionable books about social media and influencing antics these days: how does a new entry into that field compete and differentiate itself? And finally: WHAT do you mean this is a debut novel; how can that be?
This book came on scene with a lot of factors automatically in its favor and many factors that could have contributed to its undoing, but it somehow managed to balance everything out and clear all hurdles. I found this book excellent throughout and incredibly entertaining. There was just enough tension, realism, and humor, all in good measure, so that returning to the book always seemed appealing and it pulled and kept me in once I got there. I never not wanted to be reading it; I was reluctant to set it aside and eager to pick it back up. It felt different and fresh and it did not disappoint.
While it critically references or satirizes current social trends and problematic phenomena, I don’t think this is necessarily a super deep Issues Book, capitalized. But it’s still very smart, witty, fun, and keeps your brain stimulated as you try to figure out the puzzle of what in the world is happening.
The author is a fantastic, imaginative, stylish, and energetic writer, and she brings the story to life with a lot of engaging characters, especially the main character and first-person narrator, Natalie. Call her an unlikable female protagonist or whatever your preferred term is — she’s certainly unreliable and very often nasty, an awful calculating villain at worst and a troubled victimized antihero at best — but her questionable character and distorted perspective sure make for compelling reading regardless! She presents a fine example of something like “the character you love to hate.” She is giving some major Walter White energy here. And perhaps this indicates something wrong with me, but I did not find Natalie 100% unsympathetic, despite how truly horrible she can be.
Another feat this book accomplishes is managing to remain equally interesting while switching back and forth between “past” and “present” chapters. I was into both narrative threads and happy to read either as I encountered them. I think this is fairly rare: often there is one thread you end up liking more and another you kind of tolerate just to get back to the other one. Of course, Nasty Natalie is the uniting and diverting factor here between both!
I have read some minor critiques of the book’s ending. I had a different impression. I just didn’t think it was all that messy. Sure, trying out a new stunt might affect the initial dismount. The Wright Brothers landed their first aircraft on sled-like skid runners, not wheels. I wasn’t there, but my impression is that it probably looked a little bit different, but still worked. I think the author lands this one just fine, and she also effectively weaves back together the two Now and Then narrative threads. And she’s just a darn fine writer — again, like how can this be her first book?
I don’t want to give any more specific comps, even though there are some I’m bursting to mention, because I don’t want to give anything away. This book is a winner: people are talking about it now a few months prior to publication, and I predict they will still be talking about it at the end of this year. I hear a rumor there is a film version already in the works (appropriately featuring an actress once slapped with an “unlikable” label herself). And, like a prosperity gospel-manifesting tradwife, this book Deserves It All.
My gratitude to the author, NetGalley, and Penguin Random House/Knopf for providing an ARC to review Yesteryear, due out on April 7, 2026!