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Member Reviews

Thank you to the author, Lake Union Publishing and NetGalley for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

This was a quick and enjoyable read, told in alternating POVs by two characters who are meant to be diametrically opposed in lifestyle -but who actually have many of the same issues to deal with in their lives. Although the writing was a bit formulaic, the premise was intriguing and the characters, including secondary characters, well-drawn (not necessarily likeable though). I loved the fact that the author did not shy away from hot topics like mental health, women in tech, picture-perfect lies on the Gram, social media and the hold it has on us. The ending was predictably neat, with all loose ends tied into a happy-end bow - but satisfying in spite of the predictability.

3.5 stars, rounded up to 4

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I think I was beginning, as I often do, to feel a bit disillusioned and tired of the blog/Instagram ‘game’, and I haven’t read many books that have social media as a central focus. I of course LOVE this content creation world, but I often think that certain elements have become game-ified, leaving little room for creativity but plenty for a herd mentality. In this novel, Kelly Harms throws this conversation open in a story that’s told through the eyes of two characters and chapters that alternate between them. I think this is a format that works perfectly for this story.

I ended up rating this novel three stars out of five, because although lots was great about this book (the topics tackled, the character development, lots of the characters’ own monologues), I felt some parts of the plot were thin on the ground and others felt like they’d been mangled and squished into the narrative for the sake of it.

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At first I thought this book would be too trendy for me, focusing on a social media influencer. I was wrong, as the two main characters in the book are quite unique. Paige is a quirky loner, working in IT flagging issues on sites. Mia is a social media influencer, who at first glance appears spoiled and self-centered. Not to give away spoilers, but as their paths to self-discovery uncover some pretty heavy truths, the story becomes more and more appealing. I recommend the book, and thank Netgalley for the ARC.

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Thank you to NetGalley for providing a free eARC in exchange for an honest review.

I truly enjoyed reading this, it was exactly what I needed. Given that much of the world is being forced to self-isolate for possibly months, we are turning to social media more than ever. However, it can still be an uncomfortable and difficult presence in our lives. Harms creatively shows both sides of social media, and has written two protagonists that make you think about your own actions. Still an entertaining book, but perfectly though provoking!

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This story really dives into influencer culture and how toxic it can be, It was a fast and easy read but of a serious topic. During a time of social distancing this is a perfect book to read and try to disconnect.

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DNF at 40%. I had a problem with the dialogue, and couldn’t connect with the characters. The final straw for me was that her sister is in the hospital after a suicide attempt, yet she’s debating even going to see her?? No. It doesn’t add up.

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Thank you to Net Galley and the publisher for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

With all that is going on in the world right now with the coronavirus, I found this book to be very timely for me as I've examined my own social media use and its effects on my well being. What I found interesting was that I really disliked the sections dealing with the fictional Pictey platform and Mia's social media presence, and I really enjoyed the parts when Mia starts living in real life. Everything in the book comes together a bit too easily and neatly for me, but this is the perfect light read for anyone giving thought to the influence social media has in their own life.

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I loved THE OVERDUE LIFE OF AMY BYLER and was so excited to start this newest release by Kelly Harms. It did not disappoint. THE BRIGHT SIDE OF GOING DARK is an incredibly poignant and timely read about mental health and social media addiction.

Told through the alternating POVs of internet influencer Mia and social media naysayer Paige, this is a deep and meaningful story about self-worth and self-discovery. Mia and Paige’s storylines move separately on a collision course and along the way we meet a cast of interesting and memorable side characters that all have something to teach them. Despite the seriousness of the message, Harms delivers an engrossing and engaging read with several laughs thrown in for good measure.

Thank you to Lake Union Publishing & NetGalley for the chance to read an advance copy of this fun and relevant book.

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Very cute. :)

Longer review to follow, but thank you to NetGalley and the Publisher for this advanced copy. All opinions are my own.

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A fun, fast read. Definitely going to be a contemporary many will pick up and fly through. The characters are laugh out loud at times, emotional at others.

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I really enjoyed this book. While I'm getting a little tired of reading romances about influencers, this put an interesting spin on it and helped distract me from what's going on in the world.

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Mia is a social media influencer whose life revolves around providing her half of a million followers content all day everyday on Pictey, a social media platform for posting pictures. When she isn’t out capturing the most perfect shot to post to her feed, she is doing her best to interact with her followers. Unlike most influencers, Mia believes that what she does is not just for ad money. She believes that her carefully curated posts and captions help to spark conversations, friendships, and connections. She posts only positive and motivational things because she believes that people depend on her.

Paige is an employee at Pictey as an enforcer on the Standards Enforcement and Quality Assurance Team reviewing flagged content. She is a socially awkward introvert that is very cynical of the influencers on Pictey’s platform and the people that buy into their online personalities. To Paige, its all a scam for influencers to get money. Besides work, Paige doesn’t socialize much, her job is her life. When she’s not working at Pictey, she is scrolling through the feeds being a spectator to the lives of influencers and their followers.

This story is about how these 2 very different people’s lives intersect and paths cross after very traumatic events that happen in their lives simultaneously. Both are forced to not only look at their lives through a different lens, but to also live their lives differently and what they both learn changes them forever. We see how they respond, reflect, and attempt to reinvent themselves into the people they truly believe they already are.

The Bright Side of Going Dark is a great look at our dependency on not only our electronic devices but the social platforms they have created. Instead of having in person social interactions, we have become used to expressing ourselves through photos, memes, likes, and replies. We face time, teleconference, email, and text instead of sitting down or meeting up and just being in the moment. What happens when those virtual platforms are taken away and we are forced to face our life? How will we respond to this change, especially when we THINK it is a necessary part of our lives? This story does an awesome job of showing how social media and electronic devices can be very powerful and very productive tools IF USED WITH THE BEST INTENTIONS AND RESPONSIBLY. It’s about finding balance between being in the moment and also keeping up with the times.

This story goes a lot deeper than just talking about an influencer and a cynical computer programmer. It touches on very real topics such as depression, anxiety, attempted suicide, and loss. A lot of these things are exactly why some people prefer social media to in person interactions and on the flip side, a lot of people have experienced these things because of their social media dependency.
At various times throughout the book, I saw a lot of myself in both Mia and Paige. They both thought they were doing the right thing and neither realized just how much their decisions to act or not to had on others.

As an avid social media user and micro influencer, I absolutely loved this book! It’s fresh, fun, very relevant, and very, very relatable.

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Thank you for the opportunity to read this. I will be posting a full review to Goodreads, Amazon, and Instagram.

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This cute contemporary women's novel alternates between two perspectives. Mia is an extremely popular social media influencer on fictional social media site Pictey who doesn't know what to do with herself when her fiance calls off their (totally sponsored) wedding right before the wedding. Paige is a socially awkward woman who works for Pictey reviewing flags on posts/comments, but actually disdains social media herself, but ends up getting involved with Mia's account and starts to see the good side of social media as well as the dark side. Along the way, both women learn to connect to people in real life. The theme that people's lives (whether in person or on social media) are often not as perfect as they look on the outside is definitely a good one, but I also liked that while extolling personal connection, the book doesn't completely trash everything about social media but considers some of the good ways it can help connect people as well as well as its negatives. I liked Kelly Harms' book last year "The Overdue Life of Amy Byler" a little better, but she has definitely earned herself on a spot on my list of authors I will continue to read regardless of what they write.

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I requested a review copy of this book to read on vacation - I thought it would be light and fun, an easy escape. I was delighted to find that it was so much more. This is the best fictional consideration I've seen of how different people, each with their own unmet needs and personal struggles, deal with social media. The story unfolds in alternating chapters between Mia, a high-ranking influencer on a FB-like platform, and Paige, a borderline agoraphobe who works behind the scenes at that platform, policing problematic posts when they get flagged for inappropriate content. These characters are exceptionally well developed, with meaningful backstories and family dynamics that influence their choices, both online and off. And every character in the book is someone you want to know more about as you read. I appreciated that there's no easy fallback "bad guy/girl" here, but rather an array of interesting people working out problems we all (or those of us who spend anytime online) face ourselves. Highly recommend & I look forward to reading more from this author!

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A great read on the modern addiction to social media, humorous with just the right amount of darkness (pun intended!) thrown in. Thanks NetGalley!

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I had difficulty warming up to this book. Both Mia and Paige live behind a screen. Mia is a social media influencer who lives to post. Paige is a safety standards emforcer for the social media platform used by Mia. Paige assumes Mia's online identity when Mia ditches it. I found both characters to be sad and lonely. I finished the book, and all turns out ok, but I wasn't a huge fan.

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This book was fine. It's the dangers of spending so much time on social media and living your life online in one compact story. It's not terribly subtle or nuanced, but readable

What bothered me about it was the pacing and the writing/characters. It's really slow, nothing happens for the first half of the book even though if you've read the blurb you know what's going to happen. So it's painstaking getting there, which if you buy the character development then you'll be fine. 

But that brings me to my next point, I found the writing to be very lazy when it came to character development. For writing a book about technology, the author either doesn't understand how technology works, chose to ignore the complexity of working in tech, or was too lazy to properly research any of it (sure who can't hack hospital records). The result is Paige. 

She's depicted as socially isolated and awkward, and basically an IT robot with limited feelings and thrust behind the IT stereotype it was just such a shame. She could've been a complex character but because we kept going back to the dangers of technology I just felt like it was a dehumanization of IT workers and lacked creativity. I would've appreciated Paige much more in the backdrop of other details. Work in tech, fine, but it just seemed like a cop out that she was a self-proclaimed wonderful coder and then had all these emotional/social issues. It made me think readers would see her and think sure but she's an IT robot anyway, not a real person when these are real issues that affect even the least tech savvy person. There was a lot of Paige that could've been unpacked but wasn't and that was too bad.

Mia was meh. I couldn't really connect with her, I know there are probably people out there like her but found her whiny, which was probably the point.

I didn't find the ending to be realistic, there are consequences after all and nothing was really addressed, and it just didn't feel like the book did justice to any of the major topics it broached. 2.5 stars.

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To be quite honest, this was a DNF for me personally. Once I was reading about a penis on multiple pages in a row within the beginning 5% of the book, I was totally turned off from reading anymore but I pushed through but lost interest as I did not enjoy the characters. Kelly Harms is a great author and I enjoyed The Good Luck Girls of Shipwreck Lane (one of her previous works), but I just couldn't get into this one.

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Do you want to take over the place of someone’s life? But think again because nothing is for free and nothing as it seems! You may also take over the burdens of someone that you have no idea how to handle it!

This book is remarkable, powerful, riveting and incredibly written women’s fiction. It’s about living, breathing and being asocial people who buried their faces into their phones and losing the connection with the real life. It is also about dysfunctional, estranged family relations, making changes in your life to reach out your second chances, making peace with your depression and choosing different path in your life to catch your own happiness.

Mia Bell’s life looks too good to be true.

Popularity around social media arena with her influencer gig: CHECK!

A handsome, dreamy fiancée: CHECK!

A cute, adorable dog: CHECK AGAIN! It seems like lucky bitch live her dream. But what a minute! Why is she calling her wedding off and shutting down her social media accounts. Is she out of her mind? How many people want to be her! Does she have any idea? And yes, she just moves with her mother. Yes, there must be something really really wrong with her!

But don’t worry a geeky techie is about to hack her account and replaces her place. Her name is Paige Miller and she is reluctant imposter. She only wants to connect with her sister and does this as a prank. But at the end nobody laughs at her!

This book starts like a regular chic lit, light, fluffy, swoony reading but it’s not even close. It’s dealing with feminism empowerment, clinic depression and so many heavy stuffs but author’s witty, emotional and relaxing words give you enough positive energy and you easily go and become witness of the emotional turmoil of the characters because she enlighten us our vision to see the brightest sides at the darkest places and help us keep enjoying yourself and smiling the progression of the story.

Overall: It’s entertaining, smart with great sense of humour and tear jerking, poignant, lovely book I truly enjoyed to read.

Kelly Harms’ previous works are at my MOUNT TBR forever and this book encouraged me to read them ASAP.

Special thanks to NetGalley and Lake Union Publishing for sharing this promising ARC in exchange my honest review.

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