So this YA has been out for a while but I only just got
around to reading it. I picked it up because it was one of the top YA picks for
2016 (yes it has taken me three years to get around to it, but better late than
never).
And it’s good, fast paced and intriguing. It deserves to be
one of those top picks. The background to the storyline is all about social
media and the persona that you present to the world. Whether that’s the real
you or not. And if you’ve ever seen the show Catfish there are elements from that that you will recognise.
So the premise is that Lizzie has gone missing after
apparently meeting up with someone she met online. Her friend Aiden is the one
telling most of the story and he is trying to figure out which version of
Lizzie is real – the one he was friends with at school, or the one he now sees
on social media. He also begins a campaign with his friend Scobie to try and
work out what happened to Lizzie, but for a while that feels like a hopeless
cause.
Aiden is an unreliable narrator, but he didn’t freak me out
as much as most unreliable narrators do. The
Girl on the Train was a bit much for me (yes I am a wimp). But maybe it’s
because he’s fairly stable despite having some temper issues. For me the way
the backstory of Aiden and Lizzie’s relationship is revealed was brilliant.
There was just enough to keep you reading but when the reveal happens you have an
“oh yeah that makes sense” moment.
There’s some great twists in this that I didn’t see coming and
I didn’t guess the ending either. You know a twist is good when you look back
at what you’ve been reading and the story so far and think “well that
completely changes how I see that.”
Just to show how behind the times I am on this book last
summer Cloke’s latest book Toxic came
out, and I’m looking forward to reading that at some point – hopefully not in
three years’ time. I liked this more than the other YA books I’ve read recently
(13 Minutes and Bullet Catcher) and although it shared some stylistic elements with 13 Minutes like chapters made up of emails
or text messages, I found Follow me Back
to be the more believable of the two, if a little less creepy and disturbing.
The only part that I didn’t feel completely convinced by was the ending, but
given that it was completely unexpected I think that can be forgiven.
But enough from me. It’s one you need to read for yourself.
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