Reviews: Heartstream (2)
“Dangers of Influencers”
(Paperback)
The dangers of social media influence is not clear to most until we are damaged by it. Tom Pollock takes two young women and speaks their tales in a way that is entirely possible and scary. It is definitely what it seems. I would love a second book to find out what happens next.
“Tom Pollock has one hell of an imagination”
(Paperback)
On the day of her mother’s funeral, Amy is broadcasting her emotions via pads attached to her head. She promised she wouldn’t use the ‘Heartstring’ app but the lure of her social media followers was too much. After upsetting her family she travels home alone in a taxi. Upon entering her house she discovers a woman in her kitchen wearing a bomb vest and she wants to talk.
Teenager Cat is in love with Rick from the most famous band on the planet. They have their own fandom which is made up of mainly young girls who are fanatical about the group. The pair can’t tell anyone that they are dating but Cat’s best friend Evie is the biggest fan of the group and also a computer whizz. With footage emerging of Rick falling and a female voice yelling in the background, how long before Evie works out that that voice belongs to Cat?
Heartstream is a YA book set in the near distant future which focuses on peoples obsessions, especially via social media. Heartstring is an online app which allows users to wear pads on their head so that they can let people feel their emotions and comment on what they are feeling. Amy had millions of fans, some more fanatical than others. The app is like a drug to her and she gets her kicks from knowing how many people are enjoying her emotional feed.
Cat is a young girl who made the mistake of falling in love with someone famous. If the groupies/fans find out that Rick has a girlfriend she will be toast. This group has real fanatics who will go to any extremes to keep the illusion of Rick and his bandmate Nick as gods that can do no wrong. Cat’s life is in danger if her identity is ever revealed.
Polly is the woman wearing the bomb vest in Amy’s house, she has also wired the whole house too. She has been watching and waiting for this moment for a long time and now she needs Amy to listen to her. She also needs to find something that Amy’s mum may have hidden before she died.
The book is told from dual POV and alternative chapters from both Amy and Cat. At first, I was sucked into Amy’s story as you could feel how scared she was with some mad woman in her house planning on blowing herself and Amy up. Cat’s story didn’t really have me feeling anything at the beginning. She was just a young girl in love with a celebrity. However, as her story progressed I realised what it must be like for the partners of celebrities who have crazy over the top fans. I’m sure I will never understand someone who is willing to maim or hurt someone just for being with their idol.
Tom Pollock has one hell of an imagination. As the book began I had worked out that Amy and Cat must have some connection, otherwise this was going to be a book focusing on two different plots. I couldn’t work out how their stories could be interwoven and was flabbergasted when the plot revealed itself. If like me you will not expect it and it will take the book in a whole different direction.
This is one amazing book that had me hooked from the beginning. Both Amy and Cat were likeable characters dealing with their own issues in life and the choices that they made that ended up with them up being in the situation they are now in. This is definitely a must-read book for 2019.
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Heartstream
Non-Fiction, CD Audiobooks
Tom Pollock (author) , Imogen Wilde (read by) , Beth Eyre (read by)
CD Published on: 01/12/2019
Price: £68.75
