
This psychological thriller, The Haters by Robyn Harding, is a story about what can happen with fame and the public that you depend on for that fame. It’s a twisted tale of stalking, manipulation, obsessive behavior and the intrusive negatives of social media.
The protagonist, Camryn Lane, is a high school counselor with dreams of becoming an author. When she finally gets her first novel published, she is thrilled at her success and her new schedule her agent has planned for her. Except one thing, something haunts her. She continues to receive negative, abusive comments and reviews from one, just one individual.
Her book is about a young woman, sexually abused as a child, who ends up on the streets after time in a detention center for killing her abuser, eventually becoming a power player and a politician’s wife. Camryn’s critic accuses her of taking advantage of her position and using the lives of her students for ideas in her book and encourages a boycott of her book. This upsets Camryn a great deal that someone would tarnish her professional reputation this way.
She is told by fellow writers and her publicist not to worry so much, that this type of bad reviews comes with the territory of putting yourself out in public by being published. And also, responding/engaging could make things much worse – the person may be unstable.
Camryn doesn’t respond, but she believes this critic is following her around to her events and sending her things and calling anonymously. When this stalker really gets personal by posting messages on Camryn’s school portal and sending her best friend hurtful texts, she decides to take action.
Confronting the person she believes is her stalker only makes things worse, which makes her truly afraid and on edge to the point where she begins to distance herself from everyone, because she no longer trusts anyone. Camryn is convinced that the person harassing her is someone she knows, but why?
With these suspicions of her friends and family, Camryn becomes her own worst enemy. She becomes suspicious and defensive, often lashing out at and alienating those around her. It seems, the more alone time she has with her own thoughts just makes her situation worse.
Hitting rock bottom – her daughter stops speaking to her, she’s asked to take leave from her job, she’s afraid to leave her apartment – Camryn hires a cyber detective, that a friend recommended. He warns her she may not like the results of his probe – she tells him to go ahead because she needs to know. Camryn holds on to the idea that no one who really cares about her would do this to her.
At this point, things take a really dark turn, an unexpected, chilling twist. I can’t say more, don’t want to spoil it for you all, but the author really closed the novel well, really brought everything together. I highly recommend this basically social media psychological thriller, The Haters by Robyn Harding.




