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Self Care

par Leigh Stein

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
1452188,524 (3.23)9
"Two female cofounders of a wellness start-up struggle to find balance between being good people and doing good business, while trying to maintain their best friendship. Have you ever scrolled through Instagram and seen countless influencers who seem like experts at caring for themselves--from their yoga crop tops to their well-lit clean meals to their serumed skin and erudite-but-color-coded reading stack? This novel delves into the real lives of the people working in the wellness industry and exposes the world behind the filter. Maren Gelb is on a company-imposed digital detox. She tweeted something terrible about the President's daughter, and as the COO of Richual, "the most inclusive online community platform for women to cultivate the practice of self-care and change the world by changing ourselves," it's a PR nightmare. Not only is CEO Devin Avery counting on Maren to be fully present for the upcoming Series B closing, but indispensable employee Khadijah Walker has been keeping a secret that will reveal just how feminist Richual's values actually are, and former Bachelorette contestant and Richual board member Evan Wiley is about to be embroiled in a sexual misconduct scandal that could threaten Richual's future forever. When self-care is part of your revenue model, can confessing your damage be good for business?"--… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 9 mentions

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This book so perfectly encapsulates everything I hate about our social media and brand obsessed culture that I literally can't even read it. DNF around page 50. It's not the book, it's just me.

  BibliophageOnCoffee | Aug 12, 2022 |
"To be honest, I grew up working-class in Cupertino. Both my parents worked, like, a lot. My dad is an anesthesiologist and my mom is an econ professor at Stanford. When I tell people I'm from Cupertino, they assume I grew up immersed in tech and startup culture, but I really had zero exposure. Everything I've built, I built it myself."

This is a send up of internet social media. Maren and Devin are friends who started a website together, a social media site focusing on women taking care of themselves. Richual, "the most inclusive community platform for women to cultivate the practice of self-care and change the world by changing ourselves," is just as terrible as it sounds. Maren and Devin are scrambling to pull together financing, although Devin leaves plenty of room for the expensive self-care required for her image and Maren is scrambling because she has plenty of student debt and the nominal pay until the site becomes profitable is not enough to support her and her not entirely hardworking boyfriend. Then there's Khadijah, the sole Black employee who is always positioned front and center of any publicity pictures, and who single-handedly writes most of the content, who is trying to keep this job going now that she's pregnant and her partner plans to become a house-husband.

Doug was like fifteen or twenty years older than Evan and I, old enough to have bought a Nirvana CD back when that was the only way to hear music, but not old enough to be our dad.

This novel is ridiculous, but never unbelievable. Richual allows women to compete over how much self-care they engage in along with the idea that self-care is work every bit as important as social activism. None of the characters are laudable or even that nuanced, but somehow Stein gets the reader to care about all of the women, no matter how shallow and no matter how little they learn along the way. If you're even glancingly familiar with millennial/gen Z internet culture, this novel will feel all to close to reality and if you're not, I'm not sure what you'll make of it. ( )
1 voter RidgewayGirl | Jan 24, 2022 |
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"Two female cofounders of a wellness start-up struggle to find balance between being good people and doing good business, while trying to maintain their best friendship. Have you ever scrolled through Instagram and seen countless influencers who seem like experts at caring for themselves--from their yoga crop tops to their well-lit clean meals to their serumed skin and erudite-but-color-coded reading stack? This novel delves into the real lives of the people working in the wellness industry and exposes the world behind the filter. Maren Gelb is on a company-imposed digital detox. She tweeted something terrible about the President's daughter, and as the COO of Richual, "the most inclusive online community platform for women to cultivate the practice of self-care and change the world by changing ourselves," it's a PR nightmare. Not only is CEO Devin Avery counting on Maren to be fully present for the upcoming Series B closing, but indispensable employee Khadijah Walker has been keeping a secret that will reveal just how feminist Richual's values actually are, and former Bachelorette contestant and Richual board member Evan Wiley is about to be embroiled in a sexual misconduct scandal that could threaten Richual's future forever. When self-care is part of your revenue model, can confessing your damage be good for business?"--

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