<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Eve has a carefully curated online life, works occasionally, and texts constantly with her best friend, Ezra. Basically, she is an archetypal L.A. millennial. She has also been carrying on a year-long conversation with her deceased friend Miggy over text. But when Ezra goes missing on the anniversary weekend of Miggy's death, Eve feels like her world is shattering. Over a frantic weekend Eve investigates Ezra's disappearance, scouring social media for clues, while drowning her anger and anxiety in drinks, drugs, and spiritual cleansing. Eve starts to spiral as her friends try to convince her that she's overreacting, and ghosts--both real and metaphorical--continue to haunt her. When she uncovers clues to a life Ezra kept hidden, Eve starts to question how much she really knows about her best friend...and herself. In U UP? Catie Disabato holds a mirror to the ways the phantom selves we create online permeate our emotional lives and hide our worst traits from everyone, including ourselves."--Provided by publisher.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b><b>A <i>New York Times</i> Best Mystery Book of 2021</b></b> <p/><b><b>This heady, sexy novel is filled with the carefree wildness of youth....Eve's voice is enticing and compelling, and readers will be carried along with her as she learns more about herself than she ever planned. --<b><i>Booklist</i></b></b></b> <p/>A young woman investigates her best friend's disappearance while navigating codependent friendships, toxic exes, and witchy rituals. <p/>Eve has a carefully curated online life, works occasionally, and texts constantly with her best friend, Ezra. Basically, she is an archetypal L.A. millennial. She has also been carrying on a year-long conversation with her deceased friend Miggy over text. But when Ezra goes missing on the anniversary weekend of Miggy's death, Eve feels like her world is shattering. <p/> Over a frantic weekend Eve investigates Ezra's disappearance, scouring social media for clues, while drowning her anger and anxiety in drinks, drugs, and spiritual cleansing. Eve starts to spiral as her friends try to convince her that she's overreacting, and ghosts--both real and metaphorical--continue to haunt her. When she uncovers clues to a life Ezra kept hidden, Eve starts to question how much she really knows about her best friend...and herself. <p/>In <i>U UP?</i> Catie Disabato holds a mirror to the ways the phantom selves we create online permeate our emotional lives and hide our worst traits from everyone, including ourselves.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>A most anticipated book of 2021 from <i>LitHub</i></b> <br><b>A most anticipated book of 2021 from <i>The Millions</i></b> <b><i><br></i></b> <br> [In U Up?] our modern, housebound, locked-down era has transformed an often vexing question -- "Why doesn't this person I care about text me back?" -- into the stuff of existential nightmares ... feels very much of this moment. <b>--</b><i><b>The New York Times Book Review</b></i> <p/>This heady, sexy novel is filled with the carefree wildness of youth, with an added metaphysical bonus. Eve's voice is enticing and compelling, and readers will be carried along with her as she learns more about herself than she ever planned. --<b><i>Booklist</i></b> <br><b><i><br></i></b> A poignant . . . story of grief, ghosts, and friendship . . . Disabato makes [the characters] come alive on the page and in her texts. --<b><i>Publishers Weekly </i></b><br><b><i><br></i></b> Utterly bewitching<b>--</b>a dark, paranoid, mordantly funny LA noir that highlights Catie Disabato's wonderfully vivid and skewed vision of our contemporary society. Disabato is one of my favorite young authors<b>--</b>a truly original voice! <b>--Dan Chaon, author of <i>Ill Will</i></b> <p/>Disabato is a generational voice and a voice of a generation. <i>U Up</i> is smart, sharp, wise, and wrenching in equal measure . . . An enviable book by an enviable writer. I loved it.<b> --Ivy Pochoda, author of <i>These Women<br></i></b> <br>What a terrific, frisky novel! <i>U Up?</i> . . . transcends genre, and is such fun to read. Disabato's writing is at once so smooth and sharp that you don't immediately realize it's cut you--and deeply. She is a remarkable talent. <b>--Edan Lepucki, author of <i>Woman No. 17</i></b> <p/>Disabato captures LA's nightlife (and daylife!) in all of its beauty, impropriety, and conspicuous consumption as if she were the Eve Babitz of the Instagram Age. <i>U Up? </i>is a delight." <b>--Maris Kreizman, author of <i>Slaughterhouse 90210 <p/></i></b><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Catie Disabato</b>'s first novel, <i>The Ghost Network</i>, was deemed "a smart and thorny debut" that "reveals treasures" to readers, according to <i>The</i> <i>New York Times</i>. Disabato has written essays and criticism for outlets including the <i>LAist</i>, <i>Buzzfeed</i>, and <i>LA Weekly</i>. She lives in Los Angeles.
Cheapest price in the interval: 10.99 on October 22, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 10.99 on December 20, 2021
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