
Pinoy Big Brother
YouTube Channel
The official YouTube channel of Pinoy Big Brother. A popular franchise which originated from the...

Scofit Activity Tracker
Tech
ALL-DAY ACTIVITY TRACKER: Track your all-day activity like steps, heart rate, calories burned,...
Heart Rate Tracker Health Tracker

Max Deepfake Revenge
Book
A frenzied drug pusher brutally attacks Jo Hadge on her doorstep late at night. Terrified, she...
thriller

The Future
Book
The Future – as the richest people on the planet have discovered – is where the money is. The...
Speculative fiction Social media climate change
The first word I can think of to describe this book is "menacing." It's definitely creepy at times, but it mostly projects a sinister feel, as Audrey's stalker--who tells bits and pieces of his side in a POV entitled "Him"--moves closer and closer into her private world. Our other two POVs are Audrey herself and her friend Cat, her socially inept lawyer friend, who begs Audrey to move in with her as Audrey's own apartment becomes increasingly unsafe.
"But the internet can reveal just as much as it can obfuscate."
It's hard not to compare this book to Caroline Kepnes' YOU. But the portions from "Him" are slim, and I just didn't find the narration as creepy and engaging as Joe's. When I read YOU, I literally felt watched, the book was so convincing. This book feels more like a cautionary tale about oversharing on social media.
And in that facet, it does a great job. Our friend Audrey: she shares it all. Instagram stories, photos, and more. Audrey getting her daily coffee? On insta. Her latest exercise class? Shared. And, of course, her move from New York City to Washington, DC is carefully catalogued. It's easy, we realize, to track Audrey's precise location and schedules. But Audrey seems blissfully unaware, living for the adoration the internet provides her. And it gets you thinking, wondering how much we all share across social media. And why...
"Comments from my followers were hands down my favorite part of living my life on the internet... With a million friends at the palm of your hand, how could anyone ever feel truly alone?"
Audrey goes through a lot in this book, but she's not always easy to like. There are no real likeable characters here. The power is in the escalating narrative. As incidents pile up against Audrey (remember: menacing!), you are kept guessing. There's a handful of characters who could be "Him," and Barber does a good job of letting you wonder who it could be. I would settle on someone and then something would happen, and I'd start to waver, changing my mind.
I really liked the commentary on social media and oversharing, combined with the need to be liked, even if virtually. And while the character of "Him" didn't have the personality I really wanted in his sections, they did capture his desperation and his seeming lack of understanding that what he was doing was wrong.
The ending for this one was rather bizarre and bit tough to swallow. I saw some of it coming and it all happened a little quickly after all the buildup. It was definitely twisty, though! Overall, this was a very captivating thriller--perhaps not as deep as I had hoped, but definitely worth a read. 3.5 stars, rounded up here.

Sports Fans, Identity, and Socialization: Exploring the Fandemonium
Adam C. Earnheardt, Paul Haridakis and Barbara Hugenberg
Book
Once deemed an unworthy research endeavor, the study of sports fandom has garnered the attention of...

Phoenix Suns Mobile
Sports and Entertainment
App
This is the official mobile app of the Phoenix Suns. Make your iPhone or iPod Touch a unique part of...

Dallas Cowboys
Sports and Entertainment
App
This is the official mobile app of the Dallas Cowboys. Make your iPhone or iPod Touch a unique part...