
13 Books About Social Media Influencers That Reflect the Changing Landscape
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The internet has changed the world in meaningful ways. It stands to reason that the internet would change our books too. And I don’t just mean how we read them, either. I’m talking about the literal content of our books, which is constantly shifting to capture current web culture. Lately, I’ve been interested in reading books about social media influencers. Particularly, fiction in which influencers are a central part of the narration, though nonfiction written by people who make a living on Instagram and YouTube is fascinating too. Here are 13 great reads that focus on social media influencers and their role in an ever-evolving society.
If you’re looking for an excuse to quit the internet and become a woods-dwelling hermit, The Circle is it. This is an absolutely chilling novel about a woman named Mae Holland who goes to work for a powerful (think: Google) Silicon Valley company that quickly takes over her life. And I mean, her entire life. It’s all about the things we give up for the sake of convenience and digital connectivity.
This is a thoroughly modern exploration of what it means to find viral fame on the internet. April May, a normal twentysomething with a corporate graphic design job, is first to discover and document a mysterious statue that appears on the streets of Manhattan. Her video catapults her to international notoriety literally overnight as these statues, dubbed “the Carls,” appear in cities all over the world. April has to balance her new reality as a public figure with the mystery of the Carls.
Like Hank Green’s April May, the main character of Surveys is a young woman who somewhat accidentally finds fame as an influencer. Like most young influencers, she moves to Los Angeles and falls in love. However, nothing quite goes according to plan. It’s a satirical coming-of-age novel that sounds perfect for fans of the movie Ingrid Goes West.
The creator of Scott Pilgrim brings us this graphic novel about fashion blogger Lottie Person. Lee O’Malley brilliantly parodies the stereotypical Los Angeles social media star lifestyle. Leslie Hung’s gorgeous illustrations bring the story to life. Influencers lend themselves well to comic books. Both rely heavily on aesthetics, after all. Also, I love the gross title contrasted with the glam cover.
A modern take on Jack the Ripper featuring an online mystery game and a teenage detective? Sign me up! It’s the perfect internet book for thriller fans.
This isn’t “about influencers” the same way other books on this list are. But New Yorker staff writer Jia Tolentino is an essential voice on the topic of internet culture. Several of these essays indeed do focus on “the nightmare social internet,” as the official blurb puts it, and how it’s changing us, for worse or for better.
Happy scrolling!