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Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion Hardcover – August 6, 2019
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Book Club Pick for Now Read This, from PBS NewsHour and The New York Times • “A whip-smart, challenging book.”—Zadie Smith • “Jia Tolentino could be the Joan Didion of our time.”—Vulture
FINALIST FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE’S JOHN LEONARD PRIZE FOR BEST FIRST BOOK • NAMED ONE OF THE TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY AND HARVARD CRIMSON AND ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY The New York Times Book Review • Time • Chicago Tribune • The Washington Post • NPR • Variety • Esquire • Vox • Elle • Glamour • GQ • Good Housekeeping • The Paris Review • Paste • Town & Country • BookPage • Kirkus Reviews • BookRiot • Shelf Awareness
Jia Tolentino is a peerless voice of her generation, tackling the conflicts, contradictions, and sea changes that define us and our time. Now, in this dazzling collection of nine entirely original essays, written with a rare combination of give and sharpness, wit and fearlessness, she delves into the forces that warp our vision, demonstrating an unparalleled stylistic potency and critical dexterity.
Trick Mirror is an enlightening, unforgettable trip through the river of self-delusion that surges just beneath the surface of our lives. This is a book about the incentives that shape us, and about how hard it is to see ourselves clearly through a culture that revolves around the self. In each essay, Tolentino writes about a cultural prism: the rise of the nightmare social internet; the advent of scamming as the definitive millennial ethos; the literary heroine’s journey from brave to blank to bitter; the punitive dream of optimization, which insists that everything, including our bodies, should become more efficient and beautiful until we die. Gleaming with Tolentino’s sense of humor and capacity to elucidate the impossibly complex in an instant, and marked by her desire to treat the reader with profound honesty, Trick Mirror is an instant classic of the worst decade yet.
FINALIST FOR THE PEN/DIAMONSTEIN-SPIELVOGEL AWARD FOR THE ART OF THE ESSAY
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateAugust 6, 2019
- Dimensions6.3 x 1.1 x 9.6 inches
- ISBN-100525510540
- ISBN-13978-0525510543
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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From the Publisher
Praise for Trick Mirror
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Dazzlingly wide-reaching essays.”—Vanity Fair
“The millennial Susan Sontag, a brilliant voice in cultural criticism. . . She remains engaged with her subjects even as she scratches her head and wonders why we do what we do. Even better: She writes like a dream.”—The Washington Post
“I worship at the altar of Jia Tolentino, who is undoubtedly the sharpest and most incisive cultural critic alive. Jia is a for-real genius, so damn funny it's absurd, and her ability to cut through all the noise to reveal the heart of the matter is unmatched. What a gift to the universe that, in Trick Mirror, one of the subjects is herself. This book is a master class in how to think about the world in 2019.”—Samantha Irby, author of We Are Never Meeting in Real Life
“In Trick Mirror, Jia Tolentino’s thinking surges with a fierce, electric lyricism. Her mind is animated by rigor and compassion at once. She’s horrified by the world and also in love with it. Her truths are knotty but her voice is crystalline enough to handle them. She’s always got skin in the game; she knows we all do. Her intelligence is unrelenting and full-blooded, a heart beating inside every critique. She refuses easy morals, false binaries, and redemptive epiphanies, but all that refusal is in the service of something tender, humane, and often achingly beautiful—an exploration of what we long for, how we long for it, and all the stories we tell ourselves along the way.”—Leslie Jamison, author of The Recovering
“It isn’t hyperbolic to say that New Yorker staff writer Jia Tolentino could be the Joan Didion of our time—writing about feminism, vaping, popular music, religion, and sexual assault with equal amounts of ease and insight. In her debut essay collection, the writer unveils nine new pieces that help cement her place in the essayist canon. She’s an expert in the sweet spot where contemporary politics and youth culture meet and make out.”—Vulture
“From The New Yorker’s beloved cultural critic comes a bold, unflinching collection of essays about self-deception, examining everything from scammer culture to reality television. Tolentino is among our age’s finest essayists, dissecting the foibles that animate our modern lives with wit, intellectual rigor, and empathy.”—Esquire
“Modern American life, especially as lived online, increasingly takes on qualities of insanity, even nightmare, and Trick Mirror has something profound to say about how that happened.”—John Jeremiah Sullivan, author of Pulphead
“It has been a consolation these last few years to know that no matter what was happening, Jia Tolentino would be writing about it, with a clear eye and a steady hand, a quick wit and a conscience, and in some of the best prose of her generation.”—Patricia Lockwood, author of Priestdaddy
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The I in the Internet
In the beginning the internet seemed good. “I was in love with the internet the first time I used it at my dad’s office and thought it was the ULTIMATE COOL,” I wrote, when I was ten, on an Angelfire subpage titled “The Story of How Jia Got Her Web Addiction.” In a text box superimposed on a hideous violet background, I continued:
But that was in third grade and all I was doing was going to Beanie Baby sites. Having an old, icky bicky computer at home, we didn’t have the Internet. Even AOL seemed like a far-off dream. Then we got a new top-o’-the-line computer in spring break ’99, and of course it came with all that demo stuff. So I finally had AOL and I was completely amazed at the marvel of having a profile and chatting and IMS!!
Then, I wrote, I discovered personal webpages. (“I was astonished!”) I learned HTML and “little Javascript trickies.” I built my own site on the beginner-hosting site Expage, choosing pastel colors and then switching to a “starry night theme.” Then I ran out of space, so I “decided to move to Angelfire. Wow.” I learned how to make my own graphics. “This was all in the course of four months,” I wrote, marveling at how quickly my ten-year-old internet citizenry was evolving. I had recently revisited the sites that had once inspired me, and realized “how much of an idiot I was to be wowed by that.”
I have no memory of inadvertently starting this essay two decades ago, or of making this Angelfire subpage, which I found while hunting for early traces of myself on the internet. It’s now eroded to its skeleton: its landing page, titled “THE VERY BEST,” features a sepia-toned photo of Andie from Dawson’s Creek and a dead link to a new site called “THE FROSTED FIELD,” which is “BETTER!” There’s a page dedicated to a blinking mouse GIF named Susie, and a “Cool Lyrics Page” with a scrolling banner and the lyrics to Smash Mouth’s “All Star,” Shania Twain’s “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” and the TLC diss track “No Pigeons,” by Sporty Thievz. On an FAQ page—there was an FAQ page— I write that I had to close down my customizable cartoon-doll section, as “the response has been enormous.”
It appears that I built and used this Angelfire site over just a few months in 1999, immediately after my parents got a computer. My insane FAQ page specifies that the site was started in June, and a page titled “Journal”—which proclaims, “I am going to be completely honest about my life, although I won’t go too deeply into personal thoughts, though”—features entries only from October. One entry begins: “It’s so HOT outside and I can’t count the times acorns have fallen on my head, maybe from exhaustion.” Later on, I write, rather prophetically: “I’m going insane! I literally am addicted to the web!”
In 1999, it felt different to spend all day on the internet. This was true for everyone, not just for ten-year-olds: this was the You’ve Got Mail era, when it seemed that the very worst thing that could happen online was that you might fall in love with your business rival. Throughout the eighties and nineties, people had been gathering on the internet in open forums, drawn, like butterflies, to the puddles and blossoms of other people’s curiosity and expertise. Self-regulated newsgroups like Usenet cultivated lively and relatively civil discussion about space exploration, meteorology, recipes, rare albums. Users gave advice, answered questions, made friendships, and wondered what this new internet would become.
Because there were so few search engines and no centralized social platforms, discovery on the early internet took place mainly in private, and pleasure existed as its own solitary reward. A 1995 book called You Can Surf the Net! listed sites where you could read movie reviews or learn about martial arts. It urged readers to follow basic etiquette (don’t use all caps; don’t waste other people’s expensive bandwidth with overly long posts) and encouraged them to feel comfortable in this new world (“Don’t worry,” the author advised. “You have to really mess up to get flamed.”). Around this time, GeoCities began offering personal website hosting for dads who wanted to put up their own golfing sites or kids who built glittery, blinking shrines to Tolkien or Ricky Martin or unicorns, most capped off with a primitive guest book and a green-and-black visitor counter. GeoCities, like the internet itself, was clumsy, ugly, only half functional, and organized into neighborhoods: /area51/ was for sci-fi, /westhollywood/ for LGBTQ life, /enchantedforest/ for children, /petsburgh/ for pets. If you left GeoCities, you could walk around other streets in this ever-expanding village of curiosities. You could stroll through Expage or Angelfire, as I did, and pause on the thoroughfare where the tiny cartoon hamsters danced. There was an emergent aesthetic—blinking text, crude animation. If you found something you liked, if you wanted to spend more time in any of these neighborhoods, you could build your own house from HTML frames and start decorating.
This period of the internet has been labeled Web 1.0—a name that works backward from the term Web 2.0, which was coined by the writer and user-experience designer Darcy DiNucci in an article called “Fragmented Future,” published in 1999. “The Web we know now,” she wrote, “which loads into a browser window in essentially static screenfuls, is only an embryo of the Web to come. The first glimmerings of Web 2.0 are beginning to appear. . . . The Web will be understood not as screenfuls of texts and graphics but as a transport mechanism, the ether through which interactivity happens.” On Web 2.0, the structures would be dynamic, she predicted: instead of houses, websites would be portals, through which an ever-changing stream of activity—status updates, photos—could be displayed. What you did on the internet would become intertwined with what everyone else did, and the things other people liked would become the things that you would see. Web 2.0 platforms like Blogger and Myspace made it possible for people who had merely been taking in the sights to start generating their own personalized and constantly changing scenery. As more people began to register their existence digitally, a pastime turned into an imperative: you had to register yourself digitally to exist.
In a New Yorker piece from November 2000, Rebecca Mead profiled Meg Hourihan, an early blogger who went by Megnut. In just the prior eighteen months, Mead observed, the number of “weblogs” had gone from fifty to several thousand, and blogs like Megnut were drawing thousands of visitors per day. This new internet was social (“a blog consists primarily of links to other Web sites and commentary about those links”) in a way that centered on individual identity (Megnut’s readers knew that she wished there were better fish tacos in San Francisco, and that she was a feminist, and that she was close with her mom). The blogosphere was also full of mutual transactions, which tended to echo and escalate. The “main audience for blogs is other bloggers,” Mead wrote. Etiquette required that, “if someone blogs your blog, you blog his blog back.”
Through the emergence of blogging, personal lives were becoming public domain, and social incentives—to be liked, to be seen—were becoming economic ones. The mechanisms of internet exposure began to seem like a viable foundation for a career. Hourihan cofounded Blogger with Evan Williams, who later cofounded Twitter. JenniCam, founded in 1996 when the college student Jennifer Ringley started broadcasting webcam photos from her dorm room, attracted at one point up to four million daily visitors, some of whom paid a subscription fee for quicker-loading images. The internet, in promising a potentially unlimited audience, began to seem like the natural home of self-expression. In one blog post, Megnut’s boyfriend, the blogger Jason Kottke, asked himself why he didn’t just write his thoughts down in private. “Somehow, that seems strange to me though,” he wrote. “The Web is the place for you to express your thoughts and feelings and such. To put those things elsewhere seems absurd.”
Every day, more people agreed with him. The call of self-expression turned the village of the internet into a city, which expanded at time-lapse speed, social connections bristling like neurons in every direction. At ten, I was clicking around a web ring to check out other Angelfire sites full of animal GIFs and Smash Mouth trivia. At twelve, I was writing five hundred words a day on a public LiveJournal. At fifteen, I was uploading photos of myself in a miniskirt on Myspace. By twenty-five, my job was to write things that would attract, ideally, a hundred thousand strangers per post. Now I’m thirty, and most of my life is inextricable from the internet, and its mazes of incessant forced connection—this feverish, electric, unlivable hell.
Product details
- Publisher : Random House; Later Printing edition (August 6, 2019)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0525510540
- ISBN-13 : 978-0525510543
- Item Weight : 1.15 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.3 x 1.1 x 9.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #106,755 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #197 in Literary Criticism & Theory
- #258 in Essays (Books)
- #807 in Sociology Reference
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jia Tolentino is a staff writer at the New Yorker, formerly the deputy editor at Jezebel and a contributing editor at the Hairpin. She grew up in Texas, went to University of Virginia, and got her MFA in fiction from the University of Michigan. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, the New York Times Magazine, TIME, Grantland, Slate, Pitchfork, Bon Appetit, SPIN, and Fader. She lives in Brooklyn with her human partner and ninety-pound dog.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book insightful and interesting, providing thoughtful and clever insights into cultural developments. They praise the writing quality as great, articulate, and engaging. Many consider it a worthwhile read that is well-researched and worth the money. The author is described as talented and remarkable. The gender content is considered interesting for all genders, with original points about social media and feminism. However, opinions differ on the enjoyment level, with some finding it entertaining and delightful, while others consider it boring and a waste of time.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book insightful and relatable. They appreciate the author's thoughtful and clever insights into pop culture and society. The book is described as a cohesive collection of thoughts about growing up in the internet era.
"...Tolentino's style is also intense: it always feels like there's an element of suspense which binds together every strand of the web until the..." Read more
"...I also liked how the author wove in her own personal experiences as those were easy to read & digest...." Read more
"intelligently and wittily written book, great book of chapters, each one with different themes and components of history and insight." Read more
"Absolutely wonderful insight into the millennial mindset from a first-person intellectual perspective...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing quality. They find it engaging and well-researched, making it easy to read and digest.
"intelligently and wittily written book, great book of chapters, each one with different themes and components of history and insight." Read more
"Jia Tolentino is always able to write intelligently, humorously, and in a way that is clearly well-researched...." Read more
"Okay...So she is a very talented and well researched writer...." Read more
"Trick Mirror was definitely not an easy read, and at times, I felt that the author's ideas were getting a bit too convoluted...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book and find it worth reading. They say the essays make the book interesting, and the first chapter is great. While not great literature, they consider it worth the 4-5 hours it takes to read.
"...ideas and enjoyable stories was not easy, but in the end still worth it for me. Read this for enlightenment and not necessarily enjoyment...." Read more
"...It's brilliant. It names the thing right in front of you that you don't know how to tackle, much less unpack enough to make sense...." Read more
"intelligently and wittily written book, great book of chapters, each one with different themes and components of history and insight." Read more
"...I enjoyed it immensely, until the last two chapters. It descended into a personal opinion that "being a woman is just sucks in this world."..." Read more
Customers praise the book for its talent, research, and intelligence. They find the author insightful and well-written. The book resonates with them and opens doors to their own experiences.
"Everything about this book was just delightful; it is incredibly intelligent and far-reaching in its purview...." Read more
"Okay...So she is a very talented and well researched writer...." Read more
"...see more about chipotle--I think she does an excellent job speaking from her individual experience in a way that opens a door into that experience..." Read more
"This writer is a skilled and imaginative word-wright, full of ideas and sharp cultural observations that don't always gel into coherence...." Read more
Customers find the book's content interesting for all genders. They appreciate the progressive and feminist writing style, with original points about social media and feminism. The book provides a humorous take on being female and how we are getting sucked in again.
"...the book left me with some really excellent & original points about social media and feminism that have totally shifted my worldview since...." Read more
"...Talks about woman issues in different aspects of life, but it is an i teresting read for all genders" Read more
"Smart, erudite, funny take on being female and how we are getting sucked in again. I’m 64 and wish I’d had reads this thoughtful in 1970...." Read more
"...Jia scratches the surface of progressive and interesting feminist writing that I truly enjoy but delineated into defeatist narrative, “sky is falling..." Read more
Customers have different views on the book. Some find it entertaining, engaging, and encouraging, with wit and charm. Others find it boring, a waste of time and money, or average.
"...She is well qualified to do that, and has a variety of life experiences that make the essays all the more interesting...." Read more
"...based on reading so many rave reviews, but honestly I found it pretty average...." Read more
"Jia Tolentino is always able to write intelligently, humorously, and in a way that is clearly well-researched...." Read more
"...It's encouraging and empowering and the fact that we're both staunchly anti-Trump and pro-Hillary doesn't hurt either (Sorry, everyone else)...." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it a decent enough read with wonderful chapters on topics like the internet, reality TV, and scams. Others feel it's a painful read that makes life uncomfortable as it confronts issues.
"...Particularly good are the chapters on the internet, reality tv, and, especially, "Seven Scams."" Read more
"...This book makes life uncomfortable as it makes you confront things and unable to lie to yourself anymore." Read more
"...in the end, it was a decent enough read, but not worth the time required." Read more
"...It was a painful read but I only give one star to books I actually can't finish." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2024I'm reading this book in 2024, fresh in the wake of a second Trump Presidency. This book was published in 2016/2017, processing the history and consequences that came with the first. To read this book is to recall a decade of lived history as a millennial and also to see what the future we live in derives from.
Tolentino's style is also intense: it always feels like there's an element of suspense which binds together every strand of the web until the closing section of the essay where the entire web is revealed. I've found it hard to be able to put down the book but also found it hard to read more than one chapter a day. In a way, this is the book that inspired me to start writing yet again.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2021Trick Mirror was definitely not an easy read, and at times, I felt that the author's ideas were getting a bit too convoluted. But I'm still glad I read this, because the book left me with some really excellent & original points about social media and feminism that have totally shifted my worldview since. I also liked how the author wove in her own personal experiences as those were easy to read & digest.
Overall, mining through the book for these pockets of sharp ideas and enjoyable stories was not easy, but in the end still worth it for me. Read this for enlightenment and not necessarily enjoyment. I will say that people who don't fall into the progressive, millennial & Gen Z audience may not particularly like this read unless they are totally fine with reading ideas opposite from their own.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2019It's rare to be reading words that you absolutely feel were written for you, but that's always been my experience reading Jia whether it was in the Hairpin/Jezebel/or New Yorker. She writes like I want to think - reflecting a similar smarter perspective more fully examined through research and introspective thought.
The nine essays in this collection are wide ranging and a mix of the personal and universal experience. Some are familiar beats if you've read her work elsewhere (the internet, sexism, political control, etc.), but all feel new (even the excerpt from the NYer, which you can tell immediately was cut down considerably) and worthwhile.
Her essay, “The Story of a Generation in Seven Scams,” is so perfectly representative of our current generation as it dives into how success and participation in late capitalism isn't under individual control, how we got to this point through these famous and infamous grifts from the Frye Festival to the Housing Crisis.
It's brilliant. It names the thing right in front of you that you don't know how to tackle, much less unpack enough to make sense. It doesn't give us answers or and out - because that doesn't exist. This book makes life uncomfortable as it makes you confront things and unable to lie to yourself anymore.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2023intelligently and wittily written book, great book of chapters, each one with different themes and components of history and insight.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2019Absolutely wonderful insight into the millennial mindset from a first-person intellectual perspective. I enjoyed it immensely, until the last two chapters. It descended into a personal opinion that "being a woman is just sucks in this world." So it was really cool, really insightful, but then descended into a basic hatred of humanity. She has the talent to be the voice of a generation, but, wow, just kind of chill a bit. I guess that's youth lol
- Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2019Jia is officially a sensation, which comes with risks for both the author (who can become a ghostwriter of their popular avatar) and the readers (who can read into the hype more than the text itself). As her essays show however, Jia inoculated herself from such a problem ever since high school playing as a reality television "valedictorian" character.
Reading Trick Mirror gives me the "where have you been my whole life?" feeling -- a tall draught of sympathetic intelligence in a parched world of digital instrumentalization. The final essay -I Thee Dread- was precisely the honest exegesis that I needed. Jia sparks with a cognitive wattage that only a media-cyborg could possess, and while I found that some of the essays were less insightful than others, the book is a uniquely crunchy hors d'oeuvre of experiential non-fiction.
I read Trick Mirror in tandem with Irrationality: A History of the Dark Side of Reason -- I'd recommend this duo of recent publications, as these two books compliment each other very well:
https://smile.amazon.com/Irrationality-History-Dark-Side-Reason/dp/0691178674/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1D7ZR25TA962Z&keywords=irrationality+a+history+of+the+dark+side+of+reason&qid=1565203700&s=gateway&sprefix=irrationality%2Caps%2C176&sr=8-1
- Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2022*3.5 rounded to 4*
There was a lot of good conversation in this collection of stories but I still feel deep down that there was still something missing. Conversations included Internet and the influencer age, reality TV, feminism and how that translates in society to being a bitch, scammer profitability, societal pressure to undermine sexual assault on college campuses, and romanticizing weddings and society still believes in the role women play in relationships. But a lot of this was just talk. I was hoping for some resources on change that we're seeing or how us as readers can join the cause, but I guess it just wasn't meant to go to that level. It was a crude reminder how a lot of this stuff has been happening for generations but we still have not "solved" any of the issues. I did really like that Jia mentions other books that relate to whatever topic she's discussing. I certainly made a list of more books to check out!
Top reviews from other countries
- Luigi SambucetiReviewed in Italy on January 11, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book about modern society and influence of social media on everyday life
Jia Tolentino describes our society and the problems about that in a simple and direct way using concrete examples
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Cliente de AmazonReviewed in Mexico on March 13, 2021
4.0 out of 5 stars Ligero y entretenido
Entretenido, ligero y actual. Debo admitir que el capítulo sobre su participación en el reality no fue de mi agrado y me pareció un poco tedioso. El resto me gustó
- UpsideReviewed in Canada on December 25, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!
I first heard of Jia Tolentino on Instagram; an immensely talented illustrator that I admire, Jillian Tamaki created a beautiful portrait of the writer for NYT. I got curious who she was and then checked out a few interviews she gave about her writings and her book. I was captivated by her intelligence and the way she approached the issues of our internet defined era. I’m still reading the book and really enjoying it. It’s been a long time since I’ve read such a well written book that makes you think with every sentence. Her observations of society and self are very honest and very easy to relate too. It’s a must read!
One person found this helpfulReport - Koen Van CauwenbergeReviewed in Germany on December 12, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Brillant book
Brillant book of essays which helps a lot to be in touch with current evolutions in society.
- Customer86HoveeReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 10, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars 5*
One of the best books ive read this year. Written in an intellectual yet attainable prose and with some very thought provoking essays on life today as a woman. Highly recommended, especially to those interested in feminist literature and today’s society.