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What Are We Even Doing with Our Lives? - by Chelsea Marshall & Mary Dauterman (Hardcover)

What Are We Even Doing with Our Lives? - by  Chelsea Marshall & Mary Dauterman (Hardcover)
Store: Target
Last Price: 15.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Named one of the best comedy books of 2017 by Splitsider.com</strong></p><p>In this a charming, satirical children's book, <em>BuzzFeed</em>'s lead animal editor and an acclaimed art director/illustrator poke fun at our contemporary, hyper-connected, and often mundane millennial age and the absurdities of the #blessed time and place in which we all now live.</p><p>Welcome to Digi Valley, the epitome of twenty-first-century urban life! The animal-people who call it home do cool things: life coach, cat landlord, baby DJ teacher, app developer, iPhone photographer, new media consultant, beauty blogger, and, of course, freelancer. On the street, in the coffee shop, at the farmer's market, or the local vegan café, you'll meet new friends like Frances and Sadie, Freelance Frank, Realtor Rick, and Bethany the Beauty Blogger as they bike, drive, bus, hoverboard, and Uber their way around town--or just sit and enjoy a latte while doing important things on their devices. </p><p>Everybody in Digi Valley is very, very busy--texting, tweeting, video chatting, sending selfies, swiping for dates, and binging on their favorite shows. Whether you're looking for a job at the latest media startup or want to publish your own web series, this urban mecca has something for everyone. And with the emotionally sensitive, tech-friendly Digi Valley Elementary School, it's a great place to raise kids too!</p><p>In <em>What Are We Even Doing With Our Lives?</em> Chelsea Marshall and Mary Dauterman have created an authentic fictional world that illuminates the funny, silly, earnest experience of millennial life. But watch out when the unthinkable happens--the internet goes down! Filled with dozens of illustrated spreads, <em>What Are We Even Doing With Our Lives?</em> is the most honest children's book for all ages ever written... like seriously.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p><strong>Welcome to Digi Valley, a town where no one knows what they're doing but everyone's trying their best!</strong></p><p>In this charming, satirical "children's" book, Chelsea Marshall and Mary Dauterman poke fun at the hyperconnected contemporary world in which we live.</p><p>One thing is for certain in Digi Valley: Everyone is very, very busy--texting, tweeting, sending selfies, swiping for dates, and binging on their favorite shows. Whether you're looking for the best kombucha, a baby DJ class, or nothing at all, this urban mecca has something for everyone.</p><p>Follow residents like Frances and Sadie as they hustle to make their two-woman web series, freelancer Frank as he navigates the world of digital love, and Cat Landlord as he stars in a booming reality show franchise. From the local vegan café to a singles bar, you'll meet all kinds of modern workers, like CEO coach, urban farmer, brunch photographer, and more, as they bike, bus, and ride-share their way around town. Everyone here is connected in ways big and small--through their real-life interactions, but mostly through their screens.</p><p>So come to Digi Valley to celebrate the modern-day absurdity that makes us scream, "WHAT ARE WE EVEN DOING WITH OUR LIVES?"</p><p>. . . Seriously though, does anyone know?</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><em>"What Are We Even Doing With Our Lives?</em> captures the zeitgeist of right now and the past ten years by knowingly sending up Brooklyn-style trust fund-funded self-absorption with the anthropomorphic trappings of Richard Scarry's <em>Busytown</em>."--Splitsider<br><br>"A Busytown for both the directionless and uncertain and those wiling away their days doing nothing. (In other words, there's a brunch scene.)"--barnesandnoble.com<br><br>"Children will enjoy the book for the pictures and the simple sentences, but millennials will enjoy the book for the dry, satirical and spot-on humor."--Dallas Observer<br>

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