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Fakebook: A True Story. Based On Actual Lies (2013)

by Dave Cicirelli(Favorite Author)
3.11 of 5 Votes: 1
ISBN
1402284152 (ISBN13: 9781402284151)
languge
English
publisher
Sourcebooks
review 1: Fakebook is an autobiographical story by Dave Cicirelli, a young man who decided to divorce his Facebook updates from reality. He falsely announced via a Facebook status update that he was quitting his job and going travelling. Most of his Facebook friends believed him, and a few close friends were co-opted into posting supportive comments and messages to increase the believability of his tale. The cover calls this an “elaborate hoax”, but I find that description difficult: there’s nothing particularly elaborate about writing fake Facebook status updates, or posting (badly) Photoshopped photographs.From this exercise, Cicirelli attempts to make observations about the nature of friendship, life in the digital world, and so on. Unfortunately, his observations are such ... moreself-evident truths that they needn’t be demonstrated through this sort of means. Is it necessary to write a book about fooling your friends for six months to realise that friendships change, develop and sometimes disintegrate as lives take different courses?For me, the whole book just fell flat. For some people, no doubt, the fictional adventures of “Fake Dave” are rip-roaringly hilarious. I’m sure that there’s a segment of the market somewhere that finds the idea of pretending to unravel toilet paper around a horse and cart on an Amish farm hilarious. I suspect Mr Cicirelli himself is in this market segment. I’m afraid I’m not, and so I found the ever-growing succession of such fictional idiocy a drag. I struggled to get through this book.Other reviewers have expressed concerns about the ethics of the deception involved in this project. I’m not overly concerned by that. Nobody is under any obligation to share the truth on Facebook, and I suspect that most events reported on Facebook are fictionalised to some extent to show their author in a better light. This is nothing more than an extension of that idea.About a third of the way into the book, there is a delicious moment, however. Mr Cicirelli goes on a date with a girl four years his junior. He explains his online exploits to her, and she gives him short shrift, essentially dismissing the project as deceptive and pointless. In response, Mr Cicirelli calls her immature. He might have done rather better to listen to her.
review 2: Fakebook begins as a social experiment while the author is sitting in his New York apartment. He leads his friends on a wild trip from New York to Amish community and then to Mexico. His friends believe that he has lost his mind, and so the hilarious posts begin. Not only are the the posts quirky but also the photoshopped images are comical. In all, the book reminds us how people love to self-aggrandize their virtual lives and their followers take these posts to be facts. less
Reviews (see all)
Felicity
The title sounded great, but the book was total crap and unreadable. A waste of my time....
jenny
Dave Cicirelli is the modern PT Barnum.
egs
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