The instant New York Times bestseller from âqueen of the geeksâ Felicia Day, Youâre Never Weird on the Internet (Almost) is a ârelentlessly funny and surprisingly inspirationalâ (Forbes) memoir about her unusual upbringing, her rise to internet stardom, and embracing her weirdness to find her place in the world.
When Felicia Day was a girl, all she wanted was to connect with other kids (desperately). Growing up in the Deep South, where she was âhome-schooled for hippie reasons,â she looked online to find her tribe. The Internet was in its infancy and she became an early adopter at every stage of its growthâfinding joy and unlikely friendships in the emerging digital world. Her relative isolation meant that she could pursue passions like gaming, calculus, and 1930âs detective novels without shame. Because she had no idea how âuncoolâ she really was.
But if it hadnât been for her strange backgroundâthe awkwardness continued when she started college at sixteen, with Mom driving her to campus every dayâshe might never have had the naĂŻve confidence to forge her own path. Like when she graduated as valedictorian with a math degree and then headed to Hollywood to pursue a career in acting despite having zero contacts. Or when she tired of being typecast as the crazy cat-lady secretary and decided to create her own web series before people in show business understood that online video could be more than just cats chasing laser pointers.
Feliciaâs rags-to-riches rise to Internet fame launched her career as one of the most influential creators in new media. Ever candid, she opens up about the rough patches along the way, recounting battles with writerâs block, a full-blown gaming addiction, severe anxiety, and depressionâand how she reinvented herself when overachieving became overwhelming.
Showcasing Feliciaâs âengaging and often hilarious voiceâ (USA TODAY), Youâre Never Weird on the Internet (Almost) is proof that everyone should celebrate what makes them different and be brave enough to share it with the world, because anything is possible nowâeven for a digital misfit.