This is a novel about cyberbullying. Unfortunately it's not one I would want my kids to read. The first thing that disturbed me about the story was the author's very strong "believe women" stance, which is expressed over and over throughout the story. Cyberbullying done by guys tends to be very crude and obvious, such as it is in this story, with abusive and lewd comments. But cyberbullying done by girls tends to me more subtle, taking the form of using words to ruin the reputation of another person. The existence of this type of bullying is not mentioned, but is quite real. The fact is, there are nasty people of both genders, so taking the stance "believe women" in all circumstances is naive. "Innocent until proven guilty" is the fair stance. In this story, there's no doubt that the antagonist, Tyler, is guilty of bullying, but there is still a process that must be gone through to determine that guilt objectively in the eyes of others. A teacher or a parent shouldn't simply believe an accusation without evidence because it was spoken by a girl. (I'm not defending the overly dismissive attitude of Mrs West here either.)
There is another moral dimension to this story that is not addressed at all. The girl Ella (twelve years old) experienced bullying because she installed a social media app that allowed others to make anonymous comments on her profile. She did this without her parents' knowledge or consent. She refuses to turn to her parents for help with the bullying because she knows that her phone will probably be taken away from her. There's a point in the story where the girls are whining about how no adults will listen to them. Not true. The girls refuse to bring their parents into the picture, because they would have to fess up to abusing their parents' trust. At any point they can do the right thing and face the consequences, but they don't. They would rather suffer, and take a path of personal vengeance against the offender.
There's a mental health epidemic among kids these days, and it's because of social media apps on phones. The Internet is not a children's playground. When children treat it as such, they will get hurt. The real villian is not Tyler. People like Tyler exist; that is just a fact of life. The real villain is the social media company that created an app that allowed people to be abused anonymously, that allowed children to set up accounts without age verification. So the answer to Ella's problem is obvious: UNINSTALL THE APP! Does this enter her mind at all? No. The girls concentrate entirely on making Tyler pay for what he's doing.
By the end of the story, all the adults have apologised profusely, to a cringeworthy degree. I thought it was particularly farcical how the school board overseer apologised for failing to deal with a problem that wasn't even a school problem. PARENTS gave these devices to their kids. PARENTS failed to monitor what their kids were doing on them. And these kids are communicating with each other all hours or the day and night. How is that a school-created problem?
So the girls deal with Tyler. What about all the other Tylers out there? Because the girls still have their phones, they've still got the offending app installed, their parents are still unaware of their children's deception. (Apparently, the girls done nothing wrong!) So we're back to square one, waiting for the next round of anonymous abuse online - which will happen, because human nature is what it is. Oh, none of that is mentioned in the story. The story has a happy ending on the surface. You have to read between the lines to see what I see.
Is my critique too deep? Maybe, but it's realistic. I would not want my kids to read this, because the story normalises the culture of kids with phones using them in ways they shouldn't, in casual disregard of the adults who know better and wish only to protect them.