'White's sharp-eyed take on modern life couldn't be more on target ' Irish Independent
All looks perfect for Ali and Shelly. And that's what counts, right? But beneath the filters, it's a different story . . .
Ali Jones is dealing with a lot. The fallout from her ill-conceived plan to fake a pregnancy to gain new social media followers, an inbox filled with horrible messages, her ex is still ignoring her ... Oh, and she actually is pregnant. For real this time.
But as Ali debates trying to salvage her online career as a desperate step to support her baby, Queen of the Influencers Shelly Devine discovers that her mysterious stalker seems to know a shocking amount about the life not shown in her glossy aspirational content - a life Shelly wants to keep hidden.
As Ali and Shelly try to figure out how to live their lives online, they start to realise that the lines between fact and fiction are still blurry, even for them. And are they in danger of losing the people that matter most?
Read MoreWhite's sharp-eyed take on modern life couldn't be more on target and fans of the equally readable Aisling series by Sarah Breen and Emer McLysaght will doubtless lap up White's mad world - Irish IndependentAli is one of the best flawed heroines in Irish commercial fiction since Rachel in Marian Keyes' ground-breaking Rachel's Holiday - Sunday TimesGood fun ... those aching for a bit of light humour and distraction these days might count White's novels as medicine - Irish TimesThose who loved Filter This won't be disappointed - Sunday Independent