Dork Diaries 7 Fliphtml5 -

Another: “Page 89—I cried. You’re not a dork. You’re real.”

Nikki wanted to scream. But then she noticed the comments had changed. A girl named Emily wrote: “I have a diary too. I thought I was the only one who worried about frizzy hair and friend fights. Thank you.”

She turned to Brianna. “We’re taking it down. But first… add a unicorn gif on page 200. The one where I finally laugh.” dork diaries 7 fliphtml5

Brianna blinked. “FlipHTML5 said it needed more ‘interactive content.’ So I added the fart sound effects.”

Nikki groaned. The digital book had already been viewed 4,207 times. Comments scrolled beneath: “OMG, the cupcake disaster on page 43!” and “Zoe’s hair really looks like a squirrel’s nest LOL.” Another: “Page 89—I cried

Nikki’s phone buzzed. Chloe: “Is that really your diary online? Because page 112 is… wow.”

At lunch, she confronted her usual suspects: MacKenzie Hollister (too obvious), the CCP (too busy plotting popularity), and even Theodore (too nice). But it was when she saw a small watermark on the FlipHTML5 copy—“FluffyToaster77”—that she remembered. But then she noticed the comments had changed

Nikki Maxwell stared at her laptop screen, her jaw practically unhinged. There it was: Dork Diaries 7: Tales from a Not-So-Glam TV Star , perfectly rendered, page by page, on FlipHTML5. Someone had scanned the entire book—her book, her actual diary—and turned it into a flipping, virtual public spectacle.