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Meme  Cover Image Book Book

Meme / by Aaron Starmer.

Summary:

"Cole Weston--former friend, former boyfriend--was becoming erratic, dangerous. Something had to be done. Getting rid of Cole is practically a public service. So high school seniors Holly Morse, Grayson Hobbs, Logan Bailey, and Meeka Miller devise a plan: kill Cole. Bury him in the woods behind Meeka's house along with four old cell phones, wiped except for their video confession--insurance that no one will ever betray the group. And it seems like they've gotten away with it. Until the meme appears--a screenshot from their confession. The confession that's supposed to be buried with Cole forever, deep in the cold Vermont dirt."--Book jacket

Record details

  • ISBN: 0735231923
  • ISBN: 9780735231924
  • Physical Description: 274 pages ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Dutton Books, 2020.

Content descriptions

Study Program Information Note:
Accelerated Reader AR UG 4.4 10 510647.
Subject: Murder > Vermont > Fiction.
Teenagers > Vermont > Fiction.
Young adult fiction.
Genre: Psychological fiction.
Thrillers (Fiction)

Available copies

  • 10 of 10 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at De Soto.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 10 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
De Soto Public Library YA STARMER Aaron (Text) 33858000013369 Young Adult Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0735231923
Meme
Meme
by Starmer, Aaron
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Kirkus Review

Meme

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Four high school seniors take matters into their own hands when one of their friends becomes dangerously unhinged. It starts with bad-boy Cole's murder and secret burial in a grave that will soon be covered by Vermont's winter snow. This is the final step in Logan, Meeka, Holly, and Grayson's solution to Cole's increasingly violent threats toward his ex-girlfriend, Meeka. The friends believe that killing Cole was the only way to stay safe, to prevent something terrible from happening to them or others. And to ensure none of them would betray the rest, they record a video confession on old phones they were no longer using which they bury with Cole. But a few days later their faces are all over social media, plastered on a new meme based on a screenshot from their video confession. But how was the picture leaked if their phones are as dead and buried as Cole? Did one of them betray the group, or is Cole somehow still alive? Self-serving, unsympathetic characters struggle with suspicion, paranoia, and guilt throughout this taut psychological thriller about the dangers of the internet and the alt-right movement, but the attempt to engage with a promising thematic core is as superficial as the overall character development. All characters are assumed White apart from Meeka, who is adopted and ambiguously cued as a person of color. An unconvincing, skin-deep psychological thriller. (Thriller. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 0735231923
Meme
Meme
by Starmer, Aaron
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Publishers Weekly Review

Meme

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Starmer (Spontaneous) crafts a neo-noir-flavored revenge thriller that stabs at the heart of 21st-century isolation. Murdered by ex-girlfriend Meeka and her three teenage compatriots, Cole lies buried in a 100-acre Vermont backyard. After Cole began threatening violence against his former flame and her friends, Meeka, together with Holly, Logan, and Grayson, did what they felt was necessary to keep themselves safe. Though the three filmed their confession ("He had access to guns. He was great at hiding things") on long-unused phones now entombed alongside Cole, things unravel quickly when a meme makes the rounds at school--one featuring a photograph that could only have come from one of the devices. Is one of the group trying to torture the others, or is Cole not as dead as assumed? Starmer swipes at what white privilege, toxic masculinity, and lonely anger can produce in the internet's dark corners; though a few ends remain loose and the social commentary isn't always incisive, a tense, revolving first-person narrative propels the reader through an absorbing scheme-gone-wrong mystery. Ages 14--up. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Sept.)


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