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Karma Cooper is almost thirteen years old and is deeply in love with Floyd ... her smartphone. Until they break up. It’s all her parents’ fault.
Ages 10+
Pages 255
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Last Offered Mar 2025

Average Rating

385 Reviews

Featured Reviews

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Realistic and entertaining!

Review by Isabella

This books was fun and easy to read. I liked it because I just got a cell phone and my parents monitor it closely. Reading this book was a good reminder that you can use technology for good things and bad things. Also, the ""likes"" you get don't mean anything if you don't have real friends. Those mean everything!

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Queen of Likes

Video review by Brenna

Click below to see the video!

Queen of Likes

Reader Reviews

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Queen of likes

Review by Elphaba26

short chapters, but interesting. also if you like\want a phone its amazing.

Apr 06, 2026 03:44 PM
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no

Review by smidas

baddybad

Mar 03, 2026 09:00 PM
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:):):):):):):):):)

Review by barucha_annabeth

Karma Cooper is almost thirteen years old and is deeply in love with Floyd ... her smartphone. Until they break up. It’s all her parents’ fault. great loved it amazing

Mar 03, 2026 02:38 PM
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Good book ☺️

Review by ani28

This was a pretty good book. I would recommend

Mar 01, 2026 08:40 PM
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the gurl of likes

Review by yaelaamore

this book gives a little bit obsession of the phone and a lot of intense sneaky tricks and giving a little of crush liking ;)

Feb 26, 2026 10:08 PM

Parent Guide

Karma Cooper is the queen of social media and completely addicted to Snappypic (a fictional social media platform) until her concerned parents shut down her account and confiscate her phone. It takes her a while to adjust to losing 12,000 followers, but eventually she learns to anchor herself in real life and relate to people she has neglected in her pursuit of "likes," such as her best friend, her brother, and a boy in her class named Milton P. In this quick and light read, Karma discovers that real friends are more valuable than virtual ones, and that popularity isn’t everything. Parents will like this book for its unplugged message, and kids will relate to Karma’s experiences as she navigates the drama of middle school.
Parent Guide