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Por si no fuera bastante traumático cambiarse de casa, de instituto y de país, Lucy acaba de hacer el ridículo más espantoso el primer día de clase. Peor todavía, porque alguien lo ha grabado ¡y lo ha colgado en la red!
Con tantos nervios la tartamudez de Lucy se ha disparado… ¿Cómo puede nadie pensar que sería una buena idea colgar sus propios vídeos para darse a conocer? Ahora mismo cree que ya se ha avergonzado bastante para toda la eternidad…
Pero cuando por fin se anima y descubre las oportunidades de YouTube, alucina al comprobar cuantos seguidores gana, día a día, su canal.
¡Incluye consejos y trucos útiles para realizar tus vídeos y crear tu canal!
235 pages, Kindle Edition
First published April 21, 2016
Author: Emma Moss
Age Recommendation: Tween
Topic/ Theme: Self-Confidence, Vlogging
Setting: Springdale Cty (fictional town in country England)
Series: Girls Can Vlog
The plot of Lucy Locket: Online Disaster is simple enough it's a young woman using vlogging to overcome her stammer alongside saving a local business and finding new friendships in a new place. Lucy is a good protagonist she feels realistic and has natural progressions in a soft peer pressure situation. There is the usual bullying and some cyber-bullying dealt with as I would expect, ie Lucy ignores it, expected it almost. While not the ideal, or necessarily a good message to send, it feels very much the world we live in.
It is really well-formatted. Each Vlog marks the end of a chapter. You are given the thumbnail (including run time), a basic play style script, some of the comments with an indication of how many more there are, a view count and a subscriber count. The last two are particularly useful for seeing how Lucy's blog glows and what works and what doesn't for her base.
Of the pot luck books the library sent me this is probably the one I've enjoyed the most so far. To the point where I would think about reading wore in the series as light reads (you know when you get in that mood when you want to read but not anything that makes you think, yeah that is me). It stays in its lane, doesn't challenge the demographic too much and encourages Internet safety. Do I recommend it to everyone? No. But I would recommend it to 15/16 yo.
A representative gif: