Author Guest Post:Herta Feely (Saving Phoebe Murrow) on Cyberbullying
Author of
Saving Phoebe Murrow Tackles Cyberbullying
by Herta
Feely
On
January 10, 2008, I read an article in the Washington Post about a
13-year-old Missouri girl named Megan Meier who’d been cyberbullied, a cruel
incident that led her to commit suicide. Though she thought she’d been
communicating and flirting on MySpace with a cute boy named Josh Evans, 16, in
fact Josh turned out to be 47-year-old Lori Drew, a neighbor. Drew hid behind the phony profile to find out
what Megan might be saying about her daughter, Sarah, with whom Megan had been
friends. One day, Drew, tired of carrying on the charade, decided to end the
hoax, using cruel language to demean and belittle Megan, and thus the
cyber-bullying gained steam. Several teens, including Drew’s daughter, knew
about the phony profile and piled on, something at least some of them would
later regret. Finally, “Josh” posed the ultimate challenge by suggesting that
Megan kill herself, to which she replied, “For someone like you I would.” And then
she did. Her mother and father found her hanging in her closet a few minutes
later.
The
horror of this situation took me aback. At the time of the article, I was not
yet participating on social media and was hardly aware of it, although I knew my
two sons did on occasion use Facebook. (It had never occurred to me to monitor
their use!) Though horrified, I was also intrigued by the power of this medium,
and how it might obscure and complicate relationships. That we might not know
who we are actually “speaking” with. Worse yet, that we, as parents, might not know
who our children are communicating with, and that those people on the other end
of a photo and name might become a menace or actually have predatory intentions.
Another
aspect immediately took hold of me too: the idea of incorporating social media
into a novel and including a character in the story who might pose as someone
else on Facebook. Lori Drew repulsed and fascinated me. How could a mother do
something like what she’d done to Megan, a vulnerable and insecure girl only
weeks shy of her 14th birthday? And so, slowly, over a period of
nearly three years, characters began to emerge in my mind, as did plot and
storyline. The novel I planned to write would not be based on Megan’s
story, but rather was inspired by it.
Saving
Phoebe Murrow revolves
around two families, in particular two women and their 13-year-old daughters
who are best friends, and all the missteps that ensue, which ultimately leads
to a cyber-bullying incident that brings Phoebe to the brink of suicide.
Phoebe’s father also plays a key role. He has philandered before and though
Isabel forgave him for the lapse she promised herself “never again” and that
“actions have consequences.” In the opening pages, we learn that she has a nagging
feeling he is behaving the way he had during that previous infidelity.
Once I
began to write, the story flowed and I finished the first draft in nine months,
the length of a pregnancy. Then I took a couple of more years to revise. I had
writer friends read it, and also hired a series of editors to work with me on
it. Finally, in 2015, it sold to both a US independent press, Upper Hand Press,
and a UK press, Bonnier-Zaffre.
This is
the one-year anniversary of the novel, which won the New Apple Award for best general
fiction in 2016. Recently, the audiobook was released and is available on
Amazon https://goo.gl/z4e2WE. In honor of National Bullying Prevention Month
(October in the US), Upper Hand Press and I have reduced the ebook price of the
novel to $.99 for two weeks, beginning October 30th. (Thank you for
spreading the word to friends who might be interested!)
The novel
has stimulated much discussion about social media and cyber-bullying. Many of my readers and audiences ask me
questions about online safety and what parents need to do to protect their
children when using social media. As a result, I’ve been interviewed on radio
and TV and written articles and online pieces on that issue. Here is a link to
one such recent piece: https://motherhood-moment.blogspot.com/2017/09/parenting-pointers-cyberbullying.html
Earlier in the year I wrote a lengthier piece for Juno, a UK magazine on family
life. My article, “Cyberbullying,” appeared in their Early Spring 2017 issue. For
additional information about bullying prevention, here are two key websites: www.fosi.org and www.meganmeierfoundation.org
Finally,
the novel has stimulated much conversation among women’s book groups, and I
have either attended or Skyped with quite a few to
participate in their discussions.
Please
feel free to contact me through my website, www.hertafeely.com
About the Book:
A story about the timeless struggle between mothers and their teen daughters with a razor-sharp 21st century twist. This heart-wrenching, harrowing debut novel for fans of Big Little Lies (Liane Moriarty) and Reconstructing Amelia (Kimberly McCreight) will make you question what's needed to keep your children from harm.
Phoebe's mother, Isabel, is precariously balancing her career and her family. Hard-working and caring, worried but supportive, all Isabel wants, in a world of bullies and temptations, is to keep her daughter Phoebe safe. With her busy schedule, though, she fails to recognize another mother's mounting fury and the danger Phoebe faces by flirting with a mysterious boy on Facebook. A cyber-bullying episode aimed at Phoebe pushes her to the edge with horrific consequences. In her search for justice, Isabel, a DC lawyer, sets out to find the culprit behind this cruel incident.
Saving Phoebe Murrow, set amidst the complicated web of adolescent relationships, tells a story of miscommunication and malice, drugs and Facebook, prejudice and revenge.
Goodreads
About the Book:
A story about the timeless struggle between mothers and their teen daughters with a razor-sharp 21st century twist. This heart-wrenching, harrowing debut novel for fans of Big Little Lies (Liane Moriarty) and Reconstructing Amelia (Kimberly McCreight) will make you question what's needed to keep your children from harm.
Phoebe's mother, Isabel, is precariously balancing her career and her family. Hard-working and caring, worried but supportive, all Isabel wants, in a world of bullies and temptations, is to keep her daughter Phoebe safe. With her busy schedule, though, she fails to recognize another mother's mounting fury and the danger Phoebe faces by flirting with a mysterious boy on Facebook. A cyber-bullying episode aimed at Phoebe pushes her to the edge with horrific consequences. In her search for justice, Isabel, a DC lawyer, sets out to find the culprit behind this cruel incident.
Saving Phoebe Murrow, set amidst the complicated web of adolescent relationships, tells a story of miscommunication and malice, drugs and Facebook, prejudice and revenge.
Goodreads
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