"There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed." - Hemingway
Bart Hopkins is a man of our times - in more ways than simply being of the age (around 40) that is most affected by every aspect of the world situation. Originally from Galveston, Texas, but has lived in Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, South Korea, and Germany, served in the U.S. Air Force as a meteorologist for twenty years and has degrees in Liberal Arts and Education. But what makes the Bart Hopkins who authored this novel LIKE so significant is that finally someone has put their finger on the impact social media has on each of us, whether we fall into the category of Internet communications or not.
Bart offers some startling statistics about Facebook from 2012 (likely the numbers have grown since hen as now it seems most everyone is a captive of that plague: `Facebook Statistics from 2012 - Almost 1,000,000,000 users. 250,000,000 photos uploaded daily. 80% of users prefer to connect with brands through Facebook. 1,000,000 websites have integrated with Facebook. Links about sex are shared 90% more than any other link. 85% of women are annoyed by their friends on Facebook. 23% of users check their account 5 times or more each day. ` Think about that, keep in mind that the numbers are greater now, ruminate on the current publicity of the hacking crisis and the revelations of peoples behavior that once was thought to be private and now is viral public knowledge, and then dip into this absolutely marvelous book Bart has created, weaving together disparate lives in a way that only master storytellers can do...with a little help from Google and the other internet brain substitutes.
What makes LIKE work so very well is Bart's ability to create credible characters, making his litany about the foibles of Facebook far more immediate. We meet each character gradually, the first being realtor Greg who shares the following with the reader: `. It was the standard litany of Facebook alarms and hey-how-you-doings. He made a few replies, taking time to personalize the comments, then tapped the Like button on a dozen or so links, posts, and pictures. It was an easy way to send the smallest pulse of electricity out to those people and let them know they weren't forgotten. Literally, it was barely more than nothing. Practically nothing. But it wasn't nothing; it was something. Tap the Like button on one end of the digital rainbow and a pot of gold appears at the other end-- the red flag that says you have been Liked--your thoughts have been validated. Your existence affirmed. It was a connection. Shallow? Yes. Lacking substance? Probably. But it was still a connection. He remembered when AT& T's television commercials all ended with a lady singing, "Reach out and touch someone," at the end. Like was the modern-day version of "reach out and touch someone." The rules of engagement for Facebook seemed a little absurd-- the liking, the sharing, the commenting-- yet it was woven into the fabric of society, entwined in so many lives, in such strange little ways.' This was how people interacted in 2014. They tweeted, and shared, and Reddit-ed. Contrary to his own feelings, the young users probably couldn't imagine a world without this stuff, a world where people laughed out loud with each other, face-to-face, instead of LOLing over their computer.' There you have it.
But being the sensitive man Bart is, he includes the good and bad aspects of this new form of communication - distance chatting between Afghanistan posted fathers and their at home sons, cancer victims who hang on because of the support they gain from the social media, media adultery, friending, stalking, etc. Bart encourages us to step back and witness his cast of characters and the weave of his story. Alas, this is where we are, home phones are growing obsolete in favor of smartphone and tablets and iPads, reading books becomes an eBook phenomenon, our language is changing, selfies and other photos on line are replacing letters and photographs, etc. We can either become exasperated and frustrated, or we can read Bart Hopkins and begin to understand that this is where we are, like it or not. "With one Like I can say hi to a friend, support them during a crisis, share in a joke, make someone happy, or reinforce a person's self-esteem. I make myself part of their world. It's like I stopped by for coffee. But, by Liking, I can also avoid talking to all the people I don't want to waste time on. Or I can check to see what my ex-girlfriend is doing seven or eight times an hour. It's a double-edged mouse click." Bart Hopkins brings it all into focus, and in doing so has written an absolutely stunning and contemporary examination of the way we are. Highly Recommended.