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Out of the Loop Book Review: The Year Her Phone Didn’t Buzz

I found Katie Siegel’s Out of the Loop because a friend sent me a blurry screenshot of a post about it. The post said, “This book explains why you feel like you’re always missing something.” I clicked, bought it, and read it in two days on my phone.

I accidentally knocked over half a glass of cold water on my desk while reading. It soaked through three old grocery receipts I’ve been meaning to throw away for weeks, and now the paper is wrinkling and curling up at the edges. I haven’t even bothered to wipe it up.

Out of the Loop Book Review: The Year Her Phone Didn't Buzz

The story follows Maya. She’s in her late twenties and everything looks normal. She has a job, a roommate, a group of friends who text her regularly. But she keeps having this same heavy feeling. She’ll be sitting at home on a Tuesday night, scrolling, and she’ll see that three of her friends went to a concert without her. Not on purpose. No one excluded her. They just forgot to ask. The next day at work, everyone talks about a meeting she was never invited to. Then her sister mentions a family dinner that Maya apparently missed the text about.

Maya is not being bullied. She is not being ghosted. She is just quietly, persistently, left out. It’s not about cruelty. It is just the slow erasure of someone who is not disliked but simply not remembered.

The exact moment you realize you’re keeping a pathetic little tally of your own rejections

At first, Maya shrugs it off. People are busy. Texts get lost in the group chat. But then she starts noticing a pattern. She is always the one reaching out. She is always the one asking “What’s everyone up to?” No one asks her. She makes a list in her notebook of every time she feels left out. She does not plan to show anyone. She just needs to prove to herself that she is not imagining it. The list gets long.

A few years ago, I had a friend who kept canceling plans at the last minute. Not in a mean way—she genuinely just had a lot going on in her life. But after the fourth cancellation in a row, I noticed I started keeping a mental tally. Not to use against her in an argument, but just to check if I was being completely crazy or overly sensitive. Siegel captures that weird, guilty habit of tracking your own small rejections like evidence for a trial no one else knows about.

I checked my own group chats after that chapter. Nobody had texted.

The massive turning point that doesn’t involve any screaming or dramatic confrontations

The turning point isn’t loud. Maya does not scream at anyone or storm out of a party. She just stops reaching out. She stops asking “What’s everyone up to?” And no one notices. A week goes by. Two weeks. Her group chat stays quiet. Her coworkers don’t ask where she is. Her sister texts about something else, but not about the silence.

Maya finally brings it up to her best friend, and the friend just says, “I didn’t even realize you weren’t around.” She means it kindly, too. Which somehow makes it feel ten times worse.

I kept thinking about that scene later when I was trying to sleep. People always say it’s awful when someone hates you, but being completely forgotten means you don’t even register as a blip on their radar. It requires zero energy from them.

What a person actually does with the silence when the notifications stop coming in

Maya does not get a tidy resolution. She does not confront her whole friend group or write a viral post about being excluded. There is no big, emotional payoff at the end. Instead, she starts doing small things on her own. She goes to a movie alone. She takes a pottery class. She sends one text a day to someone she actually wants to talk to, without waiting for a reply.

Maya just learns to live with it. She stops measuring everything by how many notifications she has.

I finished the book on a night when I had not gotten a single text from anyone. Normally that would have made me incredibly anxious. That night, I just put my phone face down on the wet desk next to those ruined receipts and went to make some toast. The kitchen light bulb was buzzing slightly.

If you want a story about dramatic betrayals or a big confrontation, this is not it. It’s just for the people who fall through the cracks of everyone else’s attention. You may recognize yourself in Maya. You may also recognize the people you have accidentally forgotten.

Isabella Viora
Written by Isabella Viora