Member Reviews

"The Real Unreal" by Ryan Wolf skillfully intertwines reality and fantasy, creating a thought-provoking narrative that challenges perceptions. Its imaginative storytelling and rich, layered themes make it a standout in speculative fiction.

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This was a very good read and had all the elements to be a good horror thriller. The characters were diverse and the story line made it to be an interesting one! I will definitely read more from this author soon

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verse is not my favorite categoy, but this was a good read still


Thank you to the author, publisher, and netgalley for this review copy.

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Thank you to NetGalley, Rosen Publishing Group, West 44 Books, and Ryan Wolf for the opportunity to read The Real Unreal in exchange for an honest review.

"You have to be careful with rumors...They can spread like a virus."

Told as a HiLo novel-in-verse, The Real Unreal explores the power of rumors and conspiracy, especially when talking with other people over the internet.

Nate wants to go to college for the arts, so he does an art program every summer with The Lodge. Well this summer, his class is cancelled because there isn't enough staffing...due to a virus making people sick. This is post-COVID, so there is a familiarity to Nate's perception of what yet another lockdown will look like. With no job or art class to entertain his summer, Nate falls to the dark recesses of the internet.

Finding himself exploring a comment about The Lodge, his favorite summer abode for the arts, Nate discovers The Lodge might be something of a sinister place. When he gets involved in exploring these rumors, he finds himself with some crazy people and possibly more trouble than he thought he would be exposed to.

A thoroughly enjoyable and fast-paced novel that explores the dark side of isolation and rumor. Especially with our youth on the internet, knowing a reliable source from fake news is currently a needed skill. Nate falls to the strange conspiracy of rumors surrounding a building he once found familiar, but he learns a lesson about meeting people in person who he initially met online and the risk involved.

I found this to be an intriguing read, though the second half seemed to go a little over-the-top for my taste. But it is fitting with the title, making the reader question what is really real or unreal, and how sometimes the most absurd of situations are the truth of reality, while some surmises are the farthest from the truth. A great book for a young adult audience.

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Thank you so much to Rosen Publishing / West 44 and Netgalley for the ebook to read and review.

Nate is left alone a lot at home, with no school and no job and a virus sweeping the world he takes to the internet, finding himself swept up in the dark web and finding out things he wishes he never knew.

This was really interesting, a great book for young adults, the internet is filled with dark spaces and I liked that it showed how easy it was to access it all. Nate starts reading and is instantly hooked, feeling like he is just learning new things but is actually being dragged into a darker place.

I liked that it showed how quick you can believe a conspiracy from someone and that it can overcome everything else in your life, make you fall for it, make you trust everything they are sharing with, and make you do dangerous and dark things all for the sake of the belief you have formed with this conspiracy.

What I really liked was that Nate eventually learns that it was all a conspiracy, he questioned and didn’t just believe everything and after the events unfolded he later learnt his lesson, but because of his mistake he was haunted by the errors of his past. I did like the consequences for him, I liked that he had to repay for what he’d done and it was interesting how he lead the way for others to start in the wrong direction, it was very cleverly done.

It was a very fascinating read and I liked the darkness, and the direction it took. I really enjoy reading books in verse they are so unique and interesting. It’s a great book and shares the deeper and darker side to the internet and how it’s all much to easy to access and got roped into.

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This is an interesting YA book written in verse that deals with timely issues of conspiracy issues and misinformation. It's too easy these days for young adults to become radicalized online whether into misogynistic groups or conspiracy groups. This book deals with this topic and the consequences in a manner that is engaging and easy to read.

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Really quick read, really likes how faces paced and to the point it was. The layout can be a little off depending what you read on (my iPhone was shocking, my iPad was much better). The story itself was good, made you really think about what you read, the ending was different and not what I expected. Good short quick read.

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