



Search History
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3.9 • 89 Ratings
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Rebecca meets Fleabag in a sharp and funny debut novel about dating in the internet age.
After fleeing to Melbourne in the wake of a breakup, all Ana has to show for herself is an unfulfilling job at an overly enthusiastic tech start-up and one particularly questionable dating app experience. Then she meets Evan. Charming, kind and financially responsible, Evan is a complete aberration from her usual type, and Ana feels like she has finally awoken from a long dating nightmare.
As much as she tries to let their burgeoning relationship unfold IRL, Ana can't resist the urge to find Evan online. When she discovers that his previous girlfriend, Emily, died unexpectedly in a hit-and-run less than a year ago, Ana begins to worry she's living in the shadow of his lost love. Soon she's obsessively comparing herself to Emily, trawling through her dormant social media accounts in the hope of understanding her better. Online, Evan and Emily's life together looked perfect, but just how perfect was it? And why won't he talk about it?
Search History is a sharply funny debut novel about identity, obsession and desire in the internet age from one of the most perceptive and original new voices in Australian fiction.
'Perfectly captures the tragedy and comedy that is living and loving online ... with wit, humour and insight.' DIANA REID
'A serious blend of Phoebe Waller-Bridge's Fleabag and Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca with the pulse of modern day existence. Search History delivers a real, emotional and keenly heartfelt roller coaster. We can't help but root for Ana through her imperfections that are so endearingly perfect. She is all of us in our hilarious misfortunes and unexpected successes. She floats as does every word of this debut.' WEIKE WANG
'Amy Taylor's Search History is a razor-sharp and disturbingly familiar exploration of the way we live and look for love now. It made me want to delete my accounts.' ISABEL KAPLAN
'I squirmed in recognition on nearly every page of this witty, warm, and painfully honest novel. Ana's social media spirals and fear of vulnerability, her desire to construct an unblemished self both online and off, accurately reflects our ultra-modern anxieties. Search History begins as a novel of masochistic obsession before slyly transforming into a battle cry of radical self-acceptance.' CAITLIN BARASCH, author of A Novel Obsession
'In her incisive and clever debut, Amy Taylor examines how the Internet has transformed modern romance into a hall of mirrors. Search History is a novel brimming with humor, insight, and uncomfortable truths.' ANTONIA ANGRESS, author of Sirens & Muses
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Ana meets Evan the old-fashioned way: in line at a bar. But when she looks into his online footprint, she finds an idyllic ex that he won’t discuss. Is she being paranoid, or is he hiding something?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Taylor's astute debut follows one young woman trying (and failing) to pursue a relationship unburdened by online baggage. Following a significant breakup, 29-year-old Ana relocates from Perth, Australia, but her fresh start in Melbourne is not going well. Her UX design work leaves her unfulfilled ("my job basically amounts to figuring out how many pop-ups I can force on a person before they leave a webpage"), and she deletes all her dating apps after an unpleasant sexual encounter. Seeking romance IRL is much easier than she'd expected, however; Evan, whom she meets at a bar, is handsome, successful, and thoughtful. When Ana scrolls through her new beau's social media feeds, however, she learns his last serious girlfriend, a nearly perfect yoga instructor named Emily, died in a hit-and-run accident. Ana develops an online obsession with Emily, which compounds her own insecurities and threatens to derail her relationship with Evan. Though the lively pacing gets bogged down with heavy-handed broadcasting of themes and morals in the closing pages, the portrayal of Ana's compulsive online sleuthing and accompanying self-loathing is funny, keenly observed, and, at times, painfully relatable. Taylor's willingness to hold up a mirror to cringe-worthy impulses make her a writer to keep tabs on.