Review of The Takedown by Corrie Wang
This Review of The Takedown by Corrie Wang will give you the scoop on this book on my list of 2010s YA books like Pretty Little Liars.

The Takedown by Corrie Wang
To be published by Disney/Freeform on April 11, 2017
Source: eARC for review
Why is Antisocial on my list of Books Like Pretty Little Liars
- Exclusive high school setting
- Embarrassing video released
- Hackers, haters and creepy stalkers (haha that’s Pretty Little Liars in a nutshell)
Review of the Takedown by Corrie Wang
I expected The Takedown to be a glossy and superficial, like a Pretty Little Liars set in the future. I was partly right – this is a fast paced, provocative story of mean girls and revenge peppered with futuristic SMS slang.
But it’s more than that — it’s also a sharply observed, unapologetically honest look at girls and friendship and sexuality and social media. It’s set in the not-too-far future, a world where social media and technology have eroded privacy and wormed into our lives to an even greater degree.
Kyla’s not a “nice” girl. She doesn’t apologize for being pretty unlikable. She’s a Queen Bee who rules her foursome of friends with an iron fist and a sharp tongue.
One day during senior year, Kyla sees a weird countdown on her phone. After the minutes tick down, a mysterious someone releases a video of Kyla having sex with a teacher.
Kyla may be guilty of social crimes, but she’s not the person in the video. Somehow it’s been faked, presumably by someone who hates her, and she admits there’s a list. One interesting thing this book pulls off is making Kyla completely unsympathetic until the video drops.
After everyone turned on her and believed she’s guilty, I started feeling sorry for her and rooting for her to succeed. If anyone could track and trap someone guilty of revenge porn, it’s a tough-as-nails, take-no-prisoners person like Kyla.
A few weeks ago, I read another book that dealt with issues of female friendship, female sexuality and revenge. I thought that book alternated between recycling stale notions of women and sex, and repeating stale platitudes.
Unlike that book, The Takedown takes lots of commonly-held ideas about women and sex and friendship, then turns them around and around so that the reader can examine them from a multitude of different angles.
Kyla’s role model in the book is a (future) female president of the United States. But an equally famous character is an anonymous girl who posts “bra and panty” videos of herself online. Kyla thinks that girl is a slut.
The book asks us: is a woman who willingly releases her own sexy videos a feminist heroine, or a victim of a culture that objectifies women? When a mean girl gets her comeuppance, are we supposed to cheer about that? Why is there a double standard that forces women to a “nice girl” or be deemed unlikable? To be a “good” girl or be deemed a slut?
I cringed sometimes at Kyla’s interactions with others, but really enjoyed watching her pursue her tormentor with ruthless determination. As she fights to find the person who faked and posted the video, she learns a lot about how others view her and has to come to terms with her own strengths and weaknesses as a person.
Really enjoyed this and look forward to what Corrie Wang writes next!



The hacker part got me intrigued, honestly. Never heard of this before but it sounds interesting!
Check it out – I think you'd like it!
Wow – it sounds like the author pulled off a very difficult premise. Nie review too Jen.
For What It's Worth
I thought it tackled some important issues in a fearless and interesting way.
I love it when a book I expect to be all light hearted and kind of fluffy to read ends up having a bit more depth to it. And this one sounds like it does – especially on the self image and social media front. What a relevant theme to discuss.