Cape Times

Cutting to the core of everything that is sickening and dangerous in the online world

- REVIEWER: KARINA M SZCZUREK

A page-turning read from the shocking start to the final cliffhange­r

AMY Heydenrych has been writing for years in different capacities, but Shame on You is her first novel. It was snatched up by a highly regarded UK publisher in a two-book deal last year. It is topical and edgy, qualities one expects from a psychologi­cal thriller. The protagonis­t, Holly Evans, is a social media sensation, one of those public figures we have come to identify as “brands” or “influencer­s”.

For all its wonders, the internet is a scary place that makes terrifying things possible at the click of a button. Its seeming anonymity brings out the worst in human nature. And like millions before or after her, Holly can’t resist its pull.

She is known as a cancer survivor and a devoted proponent of super healthy eating. Her followers adore her. Companies are falling over themselves to attach their brand to her name. Everything she has – the luxurious flat, the nice car, the fancy clothes and the latest beauty products – comes from lucrative sponsorshi­p deals. Her image is everything. But it is about to be destroyed by a man who wants her to suffer at all costs. In a moment of carelessne­ss, when Holly lets her guard down, she is attacked in the most brutal way. She immediatel­y realises that the assault is an act of revenge, but she is scared to co-operate with police because she doesn’t want an investigat­ion into her life to reveal all the secrets she’s been desperate to hide for many years.

And whoever is out there baying for her blood seems to know more about her than she cares to contemplat­e. “She should have known that secrets make you sick,” the narrator tells us about Holly, “that they have a way of coming back to haunt you.”

Set in London, and written from the perspectiv­e of both Holly and her attacker, Shame on You goes to the heart of everything that is sickening and dangerous about the online world.

Heydenrych presents us specifical­ly with the pitfalls women face in this precarious space, particular­ly when their engagement with the social media community goes horribly pearshaped: “Up, down, up and down.

The pornograph­y that is public shame.

“They came here for a train wreck. Well, here she is, in all her filthy glory.”

Although I would have preferred a tighter edit – more showing, less telling – Heydenrych’s debut is a page-turning read from the shocking start to the final cliffhange­r. Both her main characters have hardly any redeeming features, but the fact that we want to know everything about them exemplifie­s the addictive nature of our fascinatio­n with the online/offline presence of the rich and famous.

Shame on You is making me reconsider the way I use social media platforms, as a content producer and consumer.

Above all, the novel sheds light on a disturbing phenomenon which has the potential to make or break lives in the 21st century and should never be underestim­ated.

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 ??  ?? SHAME ON YOU Amy Heydenrych Loot.co.za (R180) Twenty7
SHAME ON YOU Amy Heydenrych Loot.co.za (R180) Twenty7

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