You Have a New Memory
An open-hearted interrogation of our digital selves, braiding cultural criticism, memoir, and narrative musings into an exploration of identity, girlhood, media, tech, nature and "finding the depth and beauty in the fucked-up world we live in" from a writer, artist, and influencer (Phoebe Bridgers).

YOU HAVE A NEW MEMORY is a deeply human inventory of the digital sphere, a searing analysis of the present and a prescient assessment of the future. In her highly anticipated debut, Aiden Arata brings us raw reportage from the liminal space between online and offline worlds, illuminating how we got here and where to go next.

With high-res, cosmic vision and razor-sharp wit, this kaleidoscopic collection of essays artfully explores what it means to exist on the internet. Arata exposes influencer grifts from the perspective of a grifter, digs into the alluring aesthetic numbness of stay-at-home girlfriend content creators, and interrogates our online fetishization of doom to grapple with the real-world apocalypse.

Arata is the wry, unexpected voice we need to navigate existing simultaneously as creators, consumers, and products in our increasingly braver and newer world.
1146511134
You Have a New Memory
An open-hearted interrogation of our digital selves, braiding cultural criticism, memoir, and narrative musings into an exploration of identity, girlhood, media, tech, nature and "finding the depth and beauty in the fucked-up world we live in" from a writer, artist, and influencer (Phoebe Bridgers).

YOU HAVE A NEW MEMORY is a deeply human inventory of the digital sphere, a searing analysis of the present and a prescient assessment of the future. In her highly anticipated debut, Aiden Arata brings us raw reportage from the liminal space between online and offline worlds, illuminating how we got here and where to go next.

With high-res, cosmic vision and razor-sharp wit, this kaleidoscopic collection of essays artfully explores what it means to exist on the internet. Arata exposes influencer grifts from the perspective of a grifter, digs into the alluring aesthetic numbness of stay-at-home girlfriend content creators, and interrogates our online fetishization of doom to grapple with the real-world apocalypse.

Arata is the wry, unexpected voice we need to navigate existing simultaneously as creators, consumers, and products in our increasingly braver and newer world.
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You Have a New Memory

You Have a New Memory

by Aiden Arata

Narrated by Aiden Arata

Unabridged

You Have a New Memory

You Have a New Memory

by Aiden Arata

Narrated by Aiden Arata

Unabridged

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Overview

An open-hearted interrogation of our digital selves, braiding cultural criticism, memoir, and narrative musings into an exploration of identity, girlhood, media, tech, nature and "finding the depth and beauty in the fucked-up world we live in" from a writer, artist, and influencer (Phoebe Bridgers).

YOU HAVE A NEW MEMORY is a deeply human inventory of the digital sphere, a searing analysis of the present and a prescient assessment of the future. In her highly anticipated debut, Aiden Arata brings us raw reportage from the liminal space between online and offline worlds, illuminating how we got here and where to go next.

With high-res, cosmic vision and razor-sharp wit, this kaleidoscopic collection of essays artfully explores what it means to exist on the internet. Arata exposes influencer grifts from the perspective of a grifter, digs into the alluring aesthetic numbness of stay-at-home girlfriend content creators, and interrogates our online fetishization of doom to grapple with the real-world apocalypse.

Arata is the wry, unexpected voice we need to navigate existing simultaneously as creators, consumers, and products in our increasingly braver and newer world.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"If, like me, you have trouble metabolizing the present, and you want your media to transport you out of reality, this book will heal you. It will horrify you, comfort you, and fill your bleak future with hope. Aiden’s writing is proof that being smart and sincere doesn’t have to be mutually exclusive. Her superpower is being a critic without judgement; somehow finding the depth and beauty in the world we must live in."

Phoebe Bridgers, singer-songwriter

“Aiden Arata’s You Have a New Memory is a kaleidoscopic portrait of growing up gripped in the fist of the internet age. These essays are tender, curious, and shamelessly smart. Arata understands the painful ache of wanting to be seen–and the price we pay for getting the very thing that we want.”—Isle McElroy, author of People Collide

"In You Have a New Memory Aiden Arata reports directly from the source, as a living, breathing participant in the creator/consumer samsara, where the stakes have never been higher. Delivered in her signature undulating prose, she knits microscopic observations with the shock of humor, violence and unexpected pathos, resulting in a vivid, hyperreal effect; the kind often reported in psychedelic use where the world is rearranged and seen anew."—Nada Alic, author of New York Times Editors' Choice Pick Bad Thoughts

“The great charm of You Have a New Memory rests in how it coordinates human affairs on galactic scale and geological time. The result feels something like beholding a full moon through a freshly sucked gummy bear, or reading a tweet from the Pope, an uncanny double exposure of registers. Aiden Arata is a high priestess in the temple of context, huffing ceremonial fumes and divining insights from the guts of modern life. And it's funny too!”
 —Tony Tulathimutte, award-winning author of Rejection

“With You Have a New Memory Aiden Arata conjures a compelling, nearly impossible voice - a wise and melancholy detachment merged with deeply vulnerable, emotional truth. I hadn’t known how badly I needed such a guide through the times we’re surviving. In the lineage of Joan Didion, both searching and knowing, philosophical and frivolous, Arata’s insistence on finding meaning in our online and IRL experience is engrossing and inspiring.”
 —Michelle Tea, author of Modern Tarot

“Such an addictive and mesmerizing book. Reading You Have a New Memory felt like being at one of those slumber parties I always wished I was invited to. The essays are dishy in the best way, from behind-the-scenes glimpses of influencer life to a cancellation unfolding in real time. But the true heart of this brave and deeply-observed book is in its tenderness. Within its pages you will find love in the apocalypse and hope in the doomscroll.”
 —Frankie Barnet, author of Mood Swings

"Poignant, hilarious, surprising, and wise, Aiden Arata's searing debut took my breath away. I'd happily read her takes on anything after this, but having her razor-sharp criticism zeroed in on internet culture—how it shapes us in ways we're only just starting to be aware of—is invaluable."—Gabrielle Korn, author of Everybody (Else) Is Perfect

You Have A New Memory is more than an essay collection about the present moment, culture, or the internet. It is a brilliant interrogation of humanity. Each essay will teach you something new about the world while ripping your heart from your chest. Aiden Arata is a powerhouse — and one of the best writers we have today.”
 —Sarah Rose Etter, award-winning author of Ripe

“I devoured these essays—it’s the kind of book where you keep texting people passages because they’re just too good not to share. Reading Arata feels like staying up late with your most perceptive friend, the one who somehow always manages to articulate exactly what you’ve been feeling about the internet, about relationships, about existing and consuming in this pre-apocalyptic world. Her observations are so piercing, yet playful, they will make you laugh, wince, and feel less alone. For anyone who’s ever experienced the quiet thrill of a DM or the hypnotic pull of an endless feed (hello, all of us), this book is a must-read.”
 —Alexandra Chang, author of Tomb Sweeping

“I learned so much from this revealing and inquisitive collection of essays—what it means to be a human on the Internet, the art of self-excavation and authenticity in the land of influencer culture, and the ways the past informs our unknown future. Aiden Arata has offered us a brilliant invocation of intimacy with the world and ourselves. You Have a New Memory is an addictive, heart-opening, and darkly humorous work by a bold new voice.”
 —Chelsea Bieker, bestselling author of Madwoman and Godshot

"Aiden Arata’s You Have a New Memory is utterly startling in its generosity: like any perfect gift, it is very hard at first to believe one deserves it. This opalescent collection holds, somehow, the inner light of the universe. Arata’s gaze is keen and gentle, graceful and curious, and there is no subject too large or too small for her—animal consciousness, human violence, Dalmatian-print tights, deep time; the call of the silica gel packet, the threat of the germ and of the corporation, it’s all here: the unbearable terror and beauty of life as it is right now, and as it has always been. To share the space of Arata’s eyeline is to be changed."—Alexandra Tanner, author of Worry

"An instant classic. Aiden Arata’s You Have a New Memory mines the origins of digital personhood, riding the line between high and low, humor and hopelessness, the search for the self in the mirror of our screen, all without turning away from the radical rawness of the human soul. The result is wholly original and achingly honest, the truth of our current moment telegraphed by an artist uniquely positioned to foretell our future. I couldn’t put it down."—Allie Rowbottom, author of Aesthetica and Jell-O Girls

"Aiden Arata's crackling and insightful debut essay collection presents a singular yet relatable vision of being young and online and simultaneously confused, horrified and seduced by TikTok phenomena like the 'stay-at-home girlfriend' meme. Arata's skillful and endlessly entertaining guided tour through the Very Online Posts of our past made me laugh, shudder knowingly, and think more critically and rigorously about what it means to grow up on social media."—Emma Specter, author of More, Please

"Arata’s shimmering debut not only showcases a unique breadth and depth of thought, but also serves as a roadmap for seeking out beauty in a world that always feels like it’s ending."—Priyanka Mattoo, author of Bird Milk & Mosquito Bones

“Observations on the internet’s uncanniness are well trod, but Arata succeeds in making them feel fresh with memorable storytelling and sinewy prose… This will resonate with the chronically online.” —Publisher's Weekly

Kirkus Reviews

2025-04-15
A trip into social media.

In her debut book, writer, artist, memer, and influencer Arata gathers 10 essays about power, identity, commodification, and, not least, reality. Like Umberto Eco inTravels in Hyperreality, Arata depicts a world of fakes, artificiality, and commercialization: in short, the seductive milieu of cyberspace. “In Real Life,” the title of an essay about her 10-day stay at a Carthusian cloister, could serve for many other pieces, as well, in which she contrasts the world of the internet—“AIM, LiveJournal, chatrooms”—with tangible, physical spaces. Real-life interactions, she admits, leave her feeling anxious, while social media offers a chance at transformation. She writes, “There was nothing remarkable about me—nothing special enough to justify my existence—but if I posted enough for my twenty-eight friends, the meaning of my life might come together, the mundane made lapidary. Better than the right to exist: the right to be someone else.” Becoming an influencer enhances that sense of being someone else. Influencers, she asserts, are “power traders of the attention economy, they mediate the sharp sleaze of advertising into something soft and trustworthy.” Besides the huge amount of free merchandise companies shower on influencers, she’s even more excited by the ability to affect people’s behavior. “The impulse to influence was humiliating, but also intoxicating, or maybe intoxicating because it was humiliating,” she writes. “I could easily, happily, sell and be sold.” In “My Year of Earning and Spending,” she recounts both sides: ghost-writing affiliate memes for an ad agency and buying useless stuff with her earnings—slick polyester sheets, pink platform crocs, a subscription toEnchanted Living Magazine. Narcissism, the compulsion to post, sincerity, and authenticity thread through Arata’s essays on the chaos of memedom and the heady influencer economy.

Acerbic reflections on being digital.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940193684480
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Publication date: 07/22/2025
Edition description: Unabridged
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