Jane Austen meets Snapchat!
It makes me sad that, based on the average star reviews at least, many people don’t seem to enjoy this particular author’s unique brand of dry, deadpan satire - or possibly even understand it as such, which I find mindboggling. I completely 100% get why people who think this is a straightforward, rather than satirical, coming of age novel would detest it; I just don’t understand, at all, how anyone could possibly mistake it as such. As for me, I relish it!
Other reviews have questioned if this is really meant to be a satire of millennials. For me, this is akin to asking if “A Modest Proposal” is really intended to be a satire of British policy. (And I also believe this book is much more warm-hearted and empathic/compassionate, not as Juvenalian; its characters are not monsters, but rather just fucking, and understandably, confused: for the fiftieth time I thank my lucky stars that I was born on the cusp...-ish...of Gen X and thus escaped much of this.) Yes, for instance, the characters say “like” a lot and end sentences with question marks... satire often employs hyperbole. I I spend a lot of time with individuals who inhabit the demographic depicted in this novel, and in my view the satire - the SATIRE, not the nuanced photorealistic depiction - is absolutely spot on, not to mention incredibly therapeutic. The main and many of the supporting characters are, in my opinion, best understood as unreliable narrators rather than unlikeable, as befitting a comedy that operates outside the arena of strict literary realism. Don’t take it personally! - this satire doesn’t so much savage actual individuals as it does a shared perplexing situation or cultural moment, while critiquing the limitations of commonly accessed options for contending with the confounding situation.
This is a delicious exploration of how Internet ubiquity has affected young adults’ development, self-concept, and ability to connect socially IRL, as well as a classic comedy of manners that skewers the conventions and affectations that hold sway at the intersection of social privilege and social media and commerce. I sincerely don’t think Jane Austen herself could have done any better with the material if she were around today to (screen?) capture it. Remember, Austen’s point was not to create beautifully costumed Masterpiece Theatre adaptations; it was to prompt readers to ask themselves what the hell are we doing!?
I found this elegantly written and, most importantly, funny and novel and FUN (taking stuff, particularly oneself, too fucking seriously is one of the satirical/hyperbolic targets in the novel), and I greatly enjoyed the voice and tone. Check out reviews at PW and Kirkus if you need endorsements better qualified than mine!