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A fast-paced teen revenge-thriller from the author of Dial A for Aunties , The Obsession will keep readers on the edge of their seats until the very end. Boy Meets Girl. Boy Stalks Girl. Girl Gets Revenge. Logan thinks he and Delilah are meant to be. Delilah doesn't know who Logan is. Logan believes no one knows Delilah like him. He makes sure of it by learning everything he can by watching her through a hidden camera. Some might call him a stalker. Logan prefers to be called "romantic". Delilah is keeping secrets though, deadly ones. There's so much more to her than meets the eye. Logan is determined to make Delilah the heroine in his twisted fantasy and he'll do anything to get what he wants. Delilah is done with the men in her life controlling her. If Logan won't let her go…she'll make him. "Sutanto has crafted a page-turning work of suspense that questions the line between romantic 'research' and stalking in the age of the internet, analyzing the roles played by abuse, misogyny, racism, and violence in contemporary relationships."― Booklist "Set against a Northern California private school backdrop, the sensational plot is riddled with twists that come at a furious pace...A suspenseful page-turner."― Kirkus Reviews "This tense, quick-moving thriller is also a thought-provoking story about the different shapes of abuse. Fans of high-drama fiction with a dark edge, like Karen McManus's One of Us Is Lying or Gretchen McNeil's #murdertrending , will be hooked."― School Library Journal Review: Just obsessed - This book is really keeping me hooked, as a person who is just trying to inculcate the habit of reading this book has been really good for that as it has simple descriptions which doesn’t has any fancy words but still give you a detail idea of the whole scene and almost gives you an almost screen type of experience. Would rate it a sold 8.5/10 Review: Good - Good









| Best Sellers Rank | #56,791 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #20 in Young Adult Fiction on Girls' & Women's Issues #27 in Young Adult Fiction on Dating & Sex #30 in Young Adult Nonfiction on Dating & Intimacy |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 3,023 Reviews |
K**I
Just obsessed
This book is really keeping me hooked, as a person who is just trying to inculcate the habit of reading this book has been really good for that as it has simple descriptions which doesn’t has any fancy words but still give you a detail idea of the whole scene and almost gives you an almost screen type of experience. Would rate it a sold 8.5/10
A**R
Good
Good
G**N
look
The price of the book is very expensive I can not buy it strictly please reduce the price of the book so that I can buy it
E**B
Obsession
Tolles Buch
S**E
Just WOW. READ IT.
Wow, can't believe the ending. Certainly, didn't expect that. Does anyone know if there is a 2nd book? I feel, it ended quickly, and left a lot of unanswered questions, for me personally, it had a lot of unfinished endings, I know some would say it was perfect it was, but I loved it and wanted to know more about the female character and what happened to her after, the jaw dropping twist. Fantastic book. Would highly recommend.
L**U
Jaw dropper
I grabbed the book and could not stop to each turn, my widen and my mouth open a few times, you get yourself almost liking the obviously crazy person and try to get a hold of yourself telling yourself no! Wild ride this one.
P**E
I was guaranteed to love it and loved it even more than that
See more of my reviews on The YA Kitten! My copy was an eARC I got as a reviewer for YA Books Central. I was guaranteed to love The Obsession. The premise is the kind of lovely twisted thing I’ve spent years asking for, so short of something like bigotry, ugly prose, or the book ending with Delilah forgiving Logan and moving forward with him as her forever guy, of course this would be a hit for me. When I was a teenager, I even started writing a surrealist YA novel to the same effect. There’s no way what I wrote then could compare to this book. The Obsession is just so, so good. There’s an often cited statistic that 40% of police officer families experience domestic abuse, but the numbers vary and that statistic comes from two studies done in the early 90s. Even so, it’s generally understood cops are more likely to abuse their partners and children than someone from the general populace. Our heroine Delilah Wong lives under the thumb of her mom’s boyfriend Brandon, an abusive cop who has taken control of her mom’s finances and done unspeakable things. It’s not a surprise that she snaps one day and kicks the jack out from under the car he was working on. It should be easy enough to play off a man crushed under a car as an accident. Except a boy named Logan started stalking her a short time before and has video proving the death was no accident. He’s obsessed with her after deciding half-Singaporean Delilah’s resemblance to his deceased, Japanese American crush Sophie is a sign from fate that Delilah is meant to be his. (I guess they all look alike to someone like him.) If she won’t be with him of her own free will, he’ll just take that video to the cops. Anything is worth it to keep Delilah with him. But Delilah is never going to be under any entitled guy’s thumb ever again–and that’s where the twisted goodness starts. The Obsession really nails its tagline: boy meets girl, boy stalks girl, girl gets revenge. It alternates between Logan’s and Delilah’s unique perspectives, which amps up the tension of a novel that will already have you tensed up like you’re in the dentist’s chair getting a filling. The only issue I have with The Obsession is Delilah’s attempt to armchair diagnose Logan via Google. Self-diagnosing with the Internet’s help generally isn’t that bad. I’ve done it myself a few times and been both right (my autism diagnosis) and wrong (thought I had eczema on my arms, turns out it’s tinea versicolor). You just don’t try to diagnose other people. Leave that to actual medical professionals like psychiatrists. The attempt to pin Logan’s behavior on a mental illness doesn’t sit right with me either. Some people are perfectly awful without being mentally ill. See: Brandon. The ending is everything I wanted from this novel and then some. Then I realized Sutanto wrote a second novel set at the same school, The New Girl. Though it doesn’t star a stalker and his vicious prey, I think I need that book now. Plus the jacket copy mentions the new main character sees a girl arrested on her first day and I really need to know if that girl is Delilah. I hope not. Tired of romanticized stalking and ready for an anti-heroine? Pick up The Obsession and enjoy.
J**Y
sweet stalker revenge
When Logan first saw Delilah at school, he was a goner. He knew immediately that she was the one for him. There could be no other, not since he lost Sophie. But that was before. This is his senior year, and he’s looking forward. Forward to a year of being with Delilah at Draycott Academy. Delilah is just starting at Draycott. As a local, she doesn’t live in the dorms like most of the students do, so she doesn’t know many of the other kids. But she does have a good friend there, Aisha, and she has a good job at the library. But at home, things are difficult. Her father was killed in an accident at work, and her mother’s new boyfriend is a local police officer. But he’s not one of the good ones. He’s controlling, he’s abusive, and he’s violent. Delilah is torn because she loves her mother, but she’s also angry that her mother let this man into their lives, into their home even, and she is just a shell of her former self. One weekend, Delilah makes a split second decision that changes everything at home, and she feels like she is free once again. She can relax. She can be a normal teenager. And when Logan asks her out, she can say yes. And when she has a truly magical day with him, she leans over for a quick kiss. But then she finds out that the date was perfect because Logan had been watching her. He looked up all her social profiles online and found out what she liked. But when she tries to break it off, she learns that he has a recording of her committing a crime. Either she keeps going out with him, or he will ruin her entire life. Delilah has to make a choice about how she wants to live her life, but as she tries to find a solution inside herself, she finds herself learning a lot more about human nature than she expected to. Jesse Q. Sutanto’s vision of a coercive relationship is painfully accurate, but I think it’s Delilah’s ingenuity and willingness to put her own needs first that makes this a strong YA novel. The Obsession is a story of strength and courage, and while I admire the attitude, I don’t recommend anyone goes about living life the way Delilah does. I enjoyed The Obsession despite the fact that these characters all have some flaws. But I thought the plot was clever and the emotions were genuine. And in the end, I just enjoyed the journey. If you can deal with unlikeable characters, seriously consider adding this book to your list. It will suck you in and then break your heart a little and then bring you back from it all with a fierce determination. Egalleys for The Obsession were provided by Sourcebooks Early Reads Program, but I liked it so much I bought a copy.
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