Julie Chan is Dead
By Liann Zhang
Atria, April 2025, 320pp.
The Short of It:
An accurate depiction of social media and its impact on society.
The Rest of It:
Julie Chan is dead.
Not really.
Her sister Chloe is.
Chloe, a high profile social media influencer is found dead in her kitchen. The shock of the moment takes Julie by surprise, but not for the reason you think.
Chloe and Julie were never close. Chloe was raised by a white, privileged family. Julie, raised by their ruthless mother. Two very different upbringings. Never close. Julie, resenting Chloe’s charmed life 98% of the time.
So in that moment, the moment where Julie discovers Chloe’s lifeless body, she decides to BE her. To become her. Their resemblance allows it and no one is the wiser. Why not enjoy the limelight for once? Why should her twin be the charmed one?
As Julie steps into Chloe’s world, it quickly becomes apparent that this ruse may take a bit of effort. Perhaps, more effort and skill than Julie anticipated.
I found this part of the story to be pretty accurate. The life of an influencer is never ending. The constant need to post content, the need for clicks. Just managing the products and sponsorships becomes overwhelming and Julie drowns in it.
But then it gets strange. Julie learns that Chloe was part of a smaller circle of influencers. Big ones. Being a part of that circle is suddenly very important to Julie. They don’t seem to notice anything different about Chloe but when Julie (as Chloe) is invited to an island retreat for VIP influencers, it all unravels quickly.
Things go south fast. This part of the story seemed ridiculous and far fetched. Some of it, absolutely included for shock factor. I felt that this method of storytelling was lazy and convenient. I was so riveted by the glamour and the glitz and then, it just went out like a light. Poof.
Strong first half, but in my opinion, didn’t deliver in the end.
Source: Review copy provided by the publisher.
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I saw this one recently when I was volunteering at my library – processing new materials. Thought about making note of it, but then forgot. Thanks for reminding me about it. Might try it if I can check it out before long. Will keep in mind what you said about the first half versus the second. Hope you’ve been doing OK!
Yeah, I mean I really liked that first half a lot. I was talking it up all over the place. I’d be curious to know why the author took the end path that she did.
Thank you for an honest review.
You’re welcome. I really loved that first half but it made me kind of angry when it went south in a really unrealistic way.
Wonder if the author was trying to show that the lifestyle of an influencer has its downsides!
If that was her point she succeeded. But the story took such an odd turn.
It sounds like it had such promise! If your novel is going to have uneven halves, a stronger second half is definitely preferred!
You know. That’s an excellent point. When I was talking about how much I liked the first half on social media, someone suggested I watch the movie Not Okay and the trailer pretty much sums up how an influencer’s need to spin a persona can get wildly out of control.
In this book, literally one sentence flipped the whole script and I was like, wait. Just wait a minute and then bam. Momentum lost.
I had been looking at picking this book up, but I really hate when the ending is such a letdown!
What a dissapointment! Thanks for letting us know!