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Remind Me to Hate You Later

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Remind Me to Hate You Later

By: Lizzy Mason
Narrated by: Emma Love, Leah Dubbin-Steckel, Rachel Noe Nishizawa
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Bloomsbury presents Remind Me to Hate You Later by Lizzy Mason, read by Emma Love, Leah Dubbin-Steckel and Rachel Noe Nishizawa.

A story about the pressures of social media, the lengths influencers will go to for fame, and the grief of losing a loved one to suicide, perfect for fans of Jandy Nelson and Gayle Forman.

Seventeen-year-old Jules grew up in her mother’s spotlight. A “parenting influencer,” Britt shares details of her daughter’s life—pictures, intimate stories, insecurities, all—to a point that becomes unbearable to Jules.

And suddenly she’s gone.

Natalie has only barely begun to grieve her best friend Jules’s death when Britt announces her plans to publish a memoir that will dissect Jules’s life and death. But Nat knows the truth behind Britt's "perfect" Instagram feed—Jules hated the pressure, the inauthenticity, the persona. There’s so much more to Jules than Britt and her followers could ever know. As Nat connects with Jules’s boyfriend, Carter, and their shared grief and guilt bonds them, she becomes determined to expose Britt, to understand what really happened, and who is to blame.

In a world that feels distorted by celebrity and the manipulations of social media and public opinion, Natalie and Carter need something real to hold onto. Remind Me to Hate You Later is a moving account of grief, depression, complex relationships, love, and the search for truth.©2023 Lizzy Mason (P)2023 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Death & Dying Depression & Mental Health Difficult Situations Family & Relationships Friendship Literature & Fiction Mental Health Health Funny Grief
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Critic reviews

A luminous, masterfully drawn story of surviving grief, love, and seeing people’s truth. Get out your tissues for this one.
A triumph of a story that offers a tender yet blistering look at love, grief, relationships, and healing. Full of hope and heartache, this book will stay with you long after the last pages. I devoured it, wept frequently, and left with a full heart.
An unflinching look at the way grief and love are inextricably intertwined, shaping each other and us. I read this entire book in one night, tearing through the pages even as I teared up.
An important and heartfelt book that broke me apart and reassembled me, REMIND ME TO HATE YOU LATER is a timely, beautiful meditation on grief and the people left behind. I laughed, I sobbed, I loved it.
. . . A painfully tender examination of the complexities of grief, as Natalie stumbles through a whole mess of complicated, mostly awful feelings, finally emerging quite scathed but still holding on to hope.
A worthwhile, authentic meditation on loss, difficult family dynamics, and emotional growth.
You'll be obsessed.
The Art of Losing handles the themes of guilt and the cycle of addiction with grace and deftness.
The Art of Losing is a lyrical and moving exploration of the fraught bonds of family, the suffocating bonds of addiction, and the warm, embracing bonds of love. This is a book you won’t soon forget.
A brave and beautiful story about sisters, addiction, and finding your place in the world--a book that belongs on every shelf.
An unflinchingly honest and touching dive into the ever-complex relationship between sisters, the reality of addiction, and the nature of love in all forms. I will never forget Harley or her story.
With prose that taps into the highest of highs and lowest of lows, The Art of Losing shows exactly what it means to have a sister, to be a sister, and--the scariest of all--to possibly lose a sister. As a big sister myself, this story rang so true.
Lizzy Mason's powerful debut is about the bonds and betrayals of sisterhood and accepting flaws in those we love. Emotionally resonant and, at times, gut-wrenching, Harley's story is one that will stay with you long after turning the last page.
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