This book was not what I expected at all.
The main character is Beth, a first-year university student, still living at home. She's fat and from the very first page you understand how being fat makes her feel. She's angry at herself for being fat, but also hates the way people look and act around her because she's fat. She has an unhealthy relationship with food and no one is looking out for her at all.
Her father recently left and her mother is suffering from depression as a result. Her younger brother is running wild and no one is doing anything about it. The only thing that makes Beth feel better (other than chocolate) is going online and trolling girls whose feeds are full of themselves being happy and beautiful and thin. When she gets someone to delete their account, she feels powerful.
While online, she meets Tori who is even more vicious when it comes to trolling. She and Beth team up and find they make a great team, eviscerating beautiful people with abandon. They chat and share and Beth soon realizes she's falling in love with this person who calls herself Tori.
But then there's the relentlessly perky girl at Uni who keeps talking to her too. Never having had friends, Beth isn't sure how to react to this, but she likes it.
So, when Tori picks a target that's a little too close to home, Beth decides she needs to stop her trolling. But, Tori doesn't want her to stop.
I have to say, rarely have I disliked a main character more than I disliked Beth. From the very first page I thought she was whiny and all too ready to blame everyone else for her unhappiness. Throughout the book she makes the absolute worst choices for herself and while I understand that the author was doing this to show the depths of her self-loathing, it didn't feel realistic. I think even the most depressed person has some tiny well of hope in there somewhere.
So, reading the whole book and spending time with this awful person was hard. Yes, se did learn some things about herself and made changes, but I feel like a lot of it was too little too late.. By the time she made those realizations, she was so deep in the mess she'd made for herself, I didn't feel like she really deserved any redemption or even a semi-happy ending.
So, unless you really want to spend time with someone who makes other people miserable, this is probably not the book for you. I does offer some insights into a modern problem, but it isn't an enjoyable read at all.
But don't just listen to me. Here's the blurb:
A wrenchingly honest, thought-provoking exploration of a girl judged and dismissed by society who must break the cycle of shaming that traps her in her real life and comforts her in her online one.
In real life, eighteen-year-old Beth is overweight, shy, and geeky. She's been bullied all her life, and her only refuge is food. Online, though, she's a vicious troll who targets the beautiful, vain, oversharing It Girls of the internet. When she meets Tori, a fellow troll, she becomes her online girlfriend-slash-partner-in-crime.
But then Tori picks a target who's a little too close to home for Beth. Unsettled, Beth decides to quit their online bullying partnership. The only problem is, Tori is not willing to let her go.