Imagine Britney Spears narrating The Day of the Locust as a gentle fable and you'll get the idea
Bret Easton Ellis
Jaime Clarke is a masterful illusionist; in his deft hands, emptiness seems full, teenage pathos appears sassy and charming. We're So Famous is a blithe, highly entertaining indictment of the permanent state of adolescence that trademarks our culture, a made-for-TV world where innocence is hardly a virtue, ambition barely a value system
- Bob Shacochis,
Darkly and pinkly comic, this is the story of a trio of teenage American girls and their pursuit of the three big Ms of American life: Music, Movies and Murder. An impressive debut by a talented young novelist
- Jonathan Ames,
We’re So Famous smartly anticipates a culture re-configured by the quest for fame. The starry-eyed girls at the center of this rock-androll fairy tale are the predecessors of today’s selfie-snappers. With biting wit and wry humor, Clarke brilliantly reminds us that we’ve always lived for likes
- Mona Awad,
The satire works, sliding down as silvery and toxic as liquid mercury
Entertainment Weekly
This first novel is plastic fantastic ... Sad, sassy and salient
Elle Magazine