Fake Accounts

Last updated
Fake Accounts
Fake Accounts (Lauren Oyler).png
First edition cover
Author Lauren Oyler
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherCatapult
Publication date
February 2, 2021
Pages272
ISBN 9781948226929

Fake Accounts is the 2021 debut novel by American author and critic Lauren Oyler. It was published on February 2, 2021, by Catapult, and on February 4, 2021, by Fourth Estate. [1] [2]

Contents

The novel follows a young woman who discovers that her boyfriend is behind a popular Instagram account which promotes conspiracy theories. It was shortlisted for the 2021 Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction. [3]

Plot

In late 2016 the narrator, a blogger, has feelings of ambivalence towards her boyfriend, Felix. She decides to go through his phone where she discovers a secret Instagram account where he espouses conspiracy theories, theories which he does not appear to believe in real life. She decides to break up with him.

The narrator recounts how she met Felix while on a pub crawl in Berlin and the two began a long-distance relationship with Felix eventually joining her in Brooklyn.

Feeling excited about the prospect of ending her relationship with Felix, she nevertheless decides to delay breaking up with him until after the 2017 Women's March, which she attends reluctantly. Felix does not text her during the March which angers her. She later receives a call from his mother that reveals Felix was killed while biking.

The narrator decides to quit her job and move to Berlin on a whim. Knowing no German (and with no plans to learn) she survives in the English language ex-pat community, taking an under-the-table job babysitting children. Bored, she also begins to aggressively date, making connections through online dating apps and coming up with different personas to try out on the men she is dating.

The narrator eventually receives a call from a former friend that reveals that several hours earlier Felix reappeared at a work event with his former colleagues, revealing he faked his death as a piece of performance art and is now living in Berlin. The narrator sends Felix an angry email to which he responds that he assumed she knew he faked his own death.

A short while later the narrator runs into Felix on the streets of Berlin. She mentions that in his new Instagram page he quoted something she once tweeted. He tells her that was the point.

Form and style

A section in the middle of the book is written in a fragmented narrative style popular in contemporary fiction, which the narrator scorns—she asks, "Why, would I want to make my book like Twitter?" Critics were divided on the merit of this parody—some found it effective and comedic, [4] [5] [6] while others disagreed. [7]

The narrator of Fake Accounts bears obvious resemblances to Oyler, leading several critics to remark on the difficulty of establishing the extent to which the narrator is based on, or parodies, the author. [8] [4] Some critics argued that this was a way for Oyler to push her readers to reflect on the ways they regularly package themselves for consumption—from dating apps to social media, we all engage in reinventions of ourselves. [9]

Fake Accounts employs other metafictional devices: [8] the narrator addresses the reader and an imagined audience of her ex-boyfriends, and the novel is divided into four sections, titled Beginning, Middle (Something Happens), Middle (Nothing Happens), and Climax.

Writing and development

Oyler enjoyed the freedom involved in writing a novel. In the past, she had mostly written for articles for magazines, which involved more constraints and editorial intervention. [10] She has a reputation for unflinching critiques of novels and books, and she has said she has prepared for a negative review, or negative reviews, of Fake Accounts. [11] Several interviewers asked her about the possibility around the time the novel was released. [11] [10]

Oyler wrote the novel in part due to a desire to comment on the internet and social interactions on the internet. [12]

Television series

In February 2022, it was reported that the novel will be adapting into a television series. The project will be produced by Anonymous Content's AC Studios with Ben Sinclair, Jen Silverman, Julia Garner, Rowan Riley and Oyler as executive producers. [13]

Critical reception

Fake Accounts received generally favourable reviews—though some were ambivalent or negative—with a cumulative "Positive" rating at the review aggregator website Book Marks, based on 30 book reviews from mainstream literary critics. [14] Reviewers frequently described it as funny. [15] [16] [7] [4] [17] [18] In a review in the New York Times , Katie Kitamura called it "invigorating" and "deadly precise," [18] and Kevin Power, writing in the Guardian, said it was "prismatically intelligent." [15]

Kirkus Reviews said it was, "Not bad as social commentary. Not that great as a story." [19] The New Statesman called it "laboured and pretentious," and boring – "an experiment in sustained snark." [8]

Parul Sehgal of the New York Times said that Fake Accounts is a novel in which social media "feels, finally, fully and thoroughly explored, with style and originality." She considered it a worthwhile read, although she warned that it is "maddening at times, too cautious, regrettably intent on replicating the very voice it critiques." [5]

The London Review of Books criticised the novel's tendency towards "aimless" and "half-finished" digressions, but complimented the writing as occasionally "precise, even dazzling." [6]

Several reviewers lamented the dearth of sincerity and emotional vulnerability in the novel, [8] [17] with Wired calling it "bloodless." [20] HuffPost said of Fake Accounts that "while successful at capturing the misery of life online, it sometimes feels captured by it." [20] A review in the Rumpus admitted that the novel's "discomfort with vulnerability, its commitment to self-awareness and self-degradation, ultimately makes for a draining emotional experience," but suggested that this had been Oyler's intention. [4]

A number of critics noted thematic similarities to Patricia Lockwood's debut novel No One Is Talking About This , which was published in the same month. [20] [16] [7] Both deal with the internet and its intrusion into day-to-day life.

Related Research Articles

<i>The Rules of Attraction</i> (film) 2002 film by Roger Avary

The Rules of Attraction is a 2002 black comedy-drama film written and directed by Roger Avary and based on Bret Easton Ellis's 1987 novel of the same title. The film was distributed by Lions Gate Films. The story follows three Camden College students who become entangled in a love triangle with a drug dealer, a virgin, and a bisexual classmate. It stars James Van Der Beek, Shannyn Sossamon, Ian Somerhalder, Jessica Biel, Kate Bosworth, Kip Pardue, and Joel Michaely.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Virginie Despentes</span> French writer, novelist, and filmmaker

Virginie Despentes is a French writer, novelist, and filmmaker. She is known for her work exploring gender, sexuality, and people who live in poverty or other marginalised conditions.

<i>Remember the Daze</i> 2007 American film

Remember the Daze, originally titled The Beautiful Ordinary, is a 2007 drama film released in theaters in April 2008. The film was directed by Jess Manafort. The plot of the movie has been described as "a glimpse into the teenage wasteland of suburbia 1999 that takes place over 24-hours, and the teenagers who make their way through the last day of high school in the last year of the past millennium."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Parul Sehgal</span> American literary critic

Parul Sehgal is an American literary critic. She is a former senior editor and columnist at The New York Times Book Review, and in 2017 became one of its team of book critics. As of December 2021, she had left to become a staff writer at The New Yorker. She also teaches in the graduate creative writing program at New York University.

<i>The Dirty Girls Social Club</i>

The Dirty Girls Social Club is a 2003 novel by Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez. Valdes-Rodriguez later wrote a sequel titled Dirty Girls on Top, which was published in 2008. The book is also credited with launching a new movement in Chicano literature and inspiring a series of "chick lit" novels about Latina women dubbed "Chica lit."

Megan Boyle is an American writer and filmmaker.

<i>Faking It</i> (American TV series) 2014 American teen romantic comedy television series

Faking It is an American romantic comedy television series that premiered on MTV on April 22, 2014, starring Rita Volk, Katie Stevens, Gregg Sulkin, Michael Willett, and Bailey De Young. The series was created by Dana Min Goodman and Julia Wolov. Carter Covington developed the series and serves as the executive producer. An eight-episode first season was ordered by MTV in October 2013. MTV announced a 10-episode second season set to premiere on September 23, 2014. In August 2014, the show won a Teen Choice Award for "Choice TV Breakout Show". In October 2014, MTV ordered 10 more episodes, meaning season two would have a total of 20 episodes. The series features the first intersex main character on a television show, and included television's first intersex character played by an intersex actor.

<i>Salvage the Bones</i> 2011 novel by Jesmyn Ward

Salvage the Bones is the second novel by American author Jesmyn Ward and published by Bloomsbury in 2011. The novel explores the plight of a working-class African-American family in Mississippi as they prepare for Hurricane Katrina and follows them through the aftermath of the storm.

Hermione Hoby is a British author, journalist, and cultural critic. She is the author of the novels Neon in Daylight and Virtue.

<i>Ghachar Ghochar</i> Book by Vivek Shanbhag

Ghachar Ghochar is a 2015 psychological drama novella written by Kannada author Vivek Shanbhag and was translated into English by Srinath Perur. Set in Bangalore, the book is about an unnamed narrator who reminisces about his dysfunctional family's rags to riches story which results in troubling behavioural changes in each of them. The title is a made-up phrase, invented by the narrator's wife and her brother, which means "tangled up beyond repair".

<i>Quicksand</i> (TV series) Swedish TV series or program

Quicksand is a Swedish psychology-crime drama streaming television series, based on the 2016 novel of the same name by Malin Persson Giolito. The first season, consisting of six episodes, was released on 5 April 2019 on Netflix and is its first Swedish-language series. The series stars Hanna Ardéhn, Felix Sandman, William Spetz, Ella Rappich, David Dencik, Reuben Sallmander, Maria Sundbom, Rebecka Hemse, Arvid Sand, Helena af Sandeberg and Anna Björk.

<i>Flights</i> (novel) 2007 novel by Olga Tokarczuk

Flights is a 2007 fragmentary novel by the Polish author Olga Tokarczuk. The book was translated into English by Jennifer Croft. The original Polish title refers to runaways, a sect of Old Believers, who believe that being in constant motion is a trick to avoid evil.

<i>Milkman</i> (novel) 2018 novel by Anna Burns

Milkman is a historical psychological fiction novel written by the Northern Irish author Anna Burns. Set during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the story follows an 18-year-old girl, "middle sister," who is harassed by an older married man known as "the milkman" and then as "Milkman". It is Burns's first novel to be published after Little Constructions in 2007, and is her third overall.

<i>Lost Children Archive</i> 2019 novel by Valeria Luiselli

Lost Children Archive is a 2019 novel by writer Valeria Luiselli. Luiselli was in part inspired by the ongoing American policy of separating children from their parents at the Mexican-American border. The novel is the first book Luiselli wrote in English.

<i>Ducks, Newburyport</i> 2019 novel by Lucy Ellmann

Ducks, Newburyport is a 2019 novel by British author Lucy Ellmann. The novel is written in the stream of consciousness narrative style, and consists of a single long sentence, with brief clauses that start with the phrase "the fact that" more than 19,000 times. The book runs over 1000 pages. It won the 2019 Goldsmiths Prize and was shortlisted for the 2019 Booker Prize.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kristen Arnett</span> American fiction author and essayist (born 1980)

Kristen Arnett is an American fiction author and essayist. Her debut novel, Mostly Dead Things, was a New York Times bestseller.

<i>The Incest Diary</i>

The Incest Diary is a 2017 memoir by an anonymous author detailing her incestuous and abusive relationship with her father.

<i>The Friend</i> (novel) 2018 novel by Sigrid Nunez

The Friend is a novel by the American writer Sigrid Nunez published by Riverhead Books in 2018. The book concerns an unnamed novelist who adopts a Great Dane that belonged to a deceased friend and mentor.

Lauren Oyler is an American author and critic. Her debut novel, Fake Accounts, was published in February 2021.

<i>The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing</i> 2021 nonfiction book by Sonia Falerio

The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing is a 2021 narrative non-fiction book by Sonia Faleiro. It tells the story of the 2014 Badaun gang-rape incident. Faleiro initially started the investigation with a plan to write a book about rape in India, but as she learned more about the case, she realised it was much more complicated than what everyone knew. She spent four years researching on the subject, traveled to the village, interviewed over 100 people including the relatives, the accused and the cops, compiled transcripts of the polygraph tests and other reports. It was released on 9 February 2021 via Grove Press and was well received by the critics.

References

  1. "Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler". Catapult. Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  2. "Fake Accounts". 4th Estate. Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  3. "The Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize". Waterstones.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Fox-Martens, Ella (2021-03-31). "Nowhere to Go but Deeper into the Self: Lauren Oyler's Fake Accounts". The Rumpus . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  5. 1 2 Sehgal, Parul (2021-01-26). "Lauren Oyler's 'Fake Accounts' Captures the Relentlessness of Online Life". The New York Times . ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  6. 1 2 Orr, Niela (2021-07-15). "I hate my job". London Review of Books . Vol. 43, no. 14. ISSN   0260-9592 . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  7. 1 2 3 Temple, Emily (1 February 2021). "How Should a Person Write About the Internet?". Literary Hub. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Thomas-Corr, Johanna (2021-01-27). "Lauren Oyler's Fake Accounts is an exercise in snark". New Statesman . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  9. "Doom-Scroll: On Lauren Oyler's "Fake Accounts"". Cleveland Review of Books. Retrieved 2021-12-21.
  10. 1 2 Goodwin, Connor (3 February 2021). "'Fantasies of Being Found Out': An Interview with Lauren Oyler". Hazlitt. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  11. 1 2 Tashjian, Rachel (29 January 2021). "How Lauren Oyler Captured the New Brooklyn Guy". GQ. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  12. Westenfeld, Adrienne (2 February 2021). "In Lauren Oyler's 'Fake Accounts,' The Internet Is 'A Doomed Framework For Society'". Esquire. Retrieved 8 February 2021.
  13. White, Peter (February 3, 2022). "'Fake Accounts' Series Adaptation In The Works From Ben Sinclair, Jen Silverman, Julia Garner & AC Studios". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved February 3, 2022.
  14. "Book Marks reviews of Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler". Literary Hub . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  15. 1 2 Power, Kevin (2021-02-04). "Fake Accounts by Lauren Oyler review – internet secrets and lies". The Guardian . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  16. 1 2 Fallon, Claire (10 February 2021). "Can A Novel Capture How Badly The Internet Has Broken Our Brains?". HuffPost. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  17. 1 2 Wallace, David Schurman (2021-02-04). "Can a Novel Really Capture the Spirit of the Internet?". The Nation . ISSN   0027-8378 . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  18. 1 2 Kitamura, Katie (2021-02-01). "'Fake Accounts' Examines the Alluring Trap of Our Online Personas". The New York Times . ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2021-11-05.
  19. "Fake Accounts". Kirkus Reviews .
  20. 1 2 3 Knibbs, Kate (1 February 2021). "Two Paths for the Extremely Online Novel". Wired. Retrieved 12 February 2021.