I had mixed feelings about this book. Most of it was very well observed, and grabbed my attention. But occasionally the story would veer off into (for me) excessive romantic tweeting of literature. I have never read any Laurie Lee, and this book has put me off ever doing so. That aside, the characters in the book were well developed, and believable, as was the story line.
I have always been wary of social media, especially Twitter, and this book played right up to my prejudices. I did not particularly like the heroine, Lisa, but in no way felt that she deserved the nasty letters and tweets that she received. At first it seemed to be a snobbish, misogynist attack on Lisa – which as an aside affected her husband’s reputation – but then it morphed into something much more repellent and sinister. I, like Edward and her friends , Bee and John Misty, could not understand Lisa’s addiction to Twitter: “It’s not real, Lisa. It’s a substitute world for real friendships, real people, real communities. Twitter’s just as full of fake friends as it is of fake news.” Whether or not, Lisa coming off Twitter altogether would have stopped all the trolling is a moot point. But, eventually, Lisa does realise that it has gotten in the way of healthy relationships – “The thing is, Misty, I was too busy for real friends, using Twitter as a substitute for the real thing. I was lonely. But I was too stubborn to make new friends in Blagsford, tarring everyone with the same brush” – leading her to suspect one person after another of the malicious correspondence.
The story becomes increasingly a thriller, as Lisa’s paranoia mounts, with more and more inexplicable (and very worrying) events taking place. You read faster and faster to get to the final reveal. The tension escalates up to an anti-climax: “‘Edward, it’s the banality of it all. That’s what’s so depressing.’ ‘What do you mean?’ ‘*** had no reason to do it.’”
I liked the ending, and would recommend it. For me, I would have preferred that Lisa’s love life were not mentioned, but that may be a positive for other readers.
I received this copy from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review