![]() ![]() ![]() And even more so, how much she worked to keep the trajectory throughout the entire book. First she was a girl, than she was a girl with a brand and in the end she became what she was preaching.īut this is the world we live in today, the one in which people measure their happiness in likes and shares and viewers and such. It’s not the best of worlds, but it’s what we have, so there’s no wonder how believable it was to see April trapped in her own bubble of fame from the moment her numbers first skyrocketed. The transition was slow, but it affected April more and more. ![]() ![]() After all, it doesn’t matter what the problem is, or how a person gets to the top of the (online) pyramid, it’s what they do with that fame and how people act in their behalf that matters – and people went a bit crazy with and against April. Because April’s readers know more about this story than Hank’s readers do, so it gets to be a bit frustrating when turning the last page of the book as you realise that you’re the one left out.Įven without the science fiction robot element, this side of the book will be the one driving the storyline forward. I need answers – as the 8 billion people in his book deserve to have them, and this book sounds cool as part of a series, but as a standalone it feels incomplete. ?) and I will only forgive the author if he intends to write a sequel, because the “inception style” sort of ending can only work this far in his favour. ![]()
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