
Sutanto's "The Obsession" delivers a psychological thriller where stalker meets prey - both hiding explosive secrets. With 14,000+ Goodreads ratings and Kirkus praising its "furious pace," this dual-perspective page-turner asks: what happens when the hunted has darker intentions than the hunter?
Jesse Q. Sutanto is the bestselling author of The Obsession, a gripping psychological YA thriller exploring the dangerous dynamics of obsession, stalking, and survival. Educated at Oxford University, where she earned her Masters, Sutanto grew up shuttling between Indonesia and Singapore, bringing a multicultural lens to her dark, character-driven narratives. Her background deeply informs the authentic voices and morally complex protagonists that define her suspenseful storytelling.
Beyond The Obsession, Sutanto has achieved remarkable commercial success with Dial A for Aunties, which became a breakout hit, and the critically acclaimed Vera Wong mystery series, including Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers.
Known for her prolific output and genre versatility—spanning YA thrillers, romantic comedies, and adult mysteries—she has published multiple books annually while maintaining strong critical reception. The Obsession has been praised by Kirkus Reviews as "a suspenseful page-turner" and continues to resonate with readers through its twisted dual perspectives and unflinching exploration of psychological manipulation.
The Obsession by Jesse Q. Sutanto is a dark psychological thriller about Logan, a high school student who becomes obsessed with Delilah after she reminds him of his deceased ex-girlfriend Sophie. When Logan witnesses Delilah killing her abusive stepfather Brandon, he uses this knowledge to manipulate and control her. Told through alternating perspectives, the novel explores themes of obsession, stalking, abuse, and survival as both characters spiral into increasingly dangerous territory.
The Obsession is ideal for young adult and adult readers who enjoy dark psychological thrillers with morally complex characters. Fans of stories exploring toxic relationships, unreliable narrators, and plot twists will appreciate Jesse Q. Sutanto's suspenseful storytelling. The book suits readers comfortable with mature themes including stalking, abuse, and violence. Those who enjoyed thrillers like You by Caroline Kepnes or similar tension-driven narratives will find The Obsession compelling.
The Obsession delivers a suspenseful page-turner with unexpected twists and compelling character development, particularly Delilah's transformation from victim to someone far more dangerous. Jesse Q. Sutanto crafts a fast-paced thriller with alternating perspectives that provide insight into both the stalker and his target. While the ending arrives abruptly, the novel's exploration of obsession, control, and survival makes it a worthwhile read for thriller enthusiasts seeking dark, morally ambiguous narratives.
Jesse Q. Sutanto is an Indonesian-born author with a Masters degree from Oxford University who writes across multiple genres including thrillers, mysteries, and romantic comedies. Beyond The Obsession, she's known for the bestselling Dial A for Aunties series and Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers. Sutanto grew up shuttling between Indonesia, Singapore, and Oxford, experiences that inform her diverse storytelling. She's published multiple books annually, demonstrating remarkable productivity in contemporary fiction.
Logan stalks Delilah through social media and hidden cameras after becoming obsessed with her resemblance to his dead ex-girlfriend Sophie. When Logan witnesses Delilah killing her abusive stepfather, he uses the murder footage to blackmail her into a relationship. As Logan's control intensifies, Delilah realizes the only way to escape his manipulation is to become more dangerous than him. Their toxic dynamic escalates through psychological manipulation, threats, and violence, culminating in a shocking conclusion.
The Obsession explores toxic obsession, stalking behavior, and the psychology of control in relationships. Jesse Q. Sutanto examines how trauma transforms victims, particularly through Delilah's evolution from someone crushed by abuse to someone willing to fight back. The novel addresses erotomania, cycles of abuse, and the dangerous romanticization of possessive behavior. Additional themes include grief's distorting effects, the performance of normalcy after trauma, and how desperation can push people toward morally questionable choices.
The Obsession presents stalking through Logan's perspective as he monitors Delilah's social media, installs hidden cameras at her house, and learns intimate details about her life. Jesse Q. Sutanto doesn't romanticize this behavior—Logan's actions are portrayed as disturbing and dangerous, though he rationalizes them as "romantic." The novel explores erotomania and how obsession can escalate from online surveillance to physical control, offering a chilling examination of predatory behavior masked as affection.
Delilah begins The Obsession as withdrawn and traumatized, having closed herself off after her father's death and enduring abuse from her stepfather Brandon. After killing Brandon, she initially feels liberation rather than guilt. Throughout the story, Jesse Q. Sutanto charts Delilah's dramatic transformation from victim to someone capable of extreme violence. By the novel's end, Delilah has shed her passive shell entirely, revealing a predatory side that makes her more dangerous than her stalker.
The Obsession concludes with a shocking and abrupt ending featuring unexpected twists delivered at a furious pace. Without spoiling specifics, the finale subverts reader expectations about which character ultimately holds power in the toxic dynamic. Jesse Q. Sutanto's conclusion emphasizes Delilah's complete transformation and includes revelations that reframe earlier events. While some readers find the ending rushed, it delivers on the novel's dark promise with a dramatic resolution to the deadly cat-and-mouse game.
The Obsession is marketed as young adult fiction but contains mature content including graphic depictions of stalking, murder, physical abuse, and psychological manipulation. Jesse Q. Sutanto doesn't shy away from dark themes, portraying both characters as morally complex and capable of violence. The novel suits older teens (16+) comfortable with intense psychological thrillers and disturbing subject matter. Parents and educators should consider the book's graphic content when recommending it to younger readers.
Logan's fixation on his deceased ex-girlfriend Sophie drives his entire obsession with Delilah, who bears a striking physical resemblance to Sophie. Sophie was involved with drugs at their private school Draycott and died tragically, leaving Logan devastated and requiring counseling after a suicide attempt. When Logan sees Delilah, she shocks him out of his depression, but he projects Sophie's image onto her rather than seeing Delilah as an individual, fueling his dangerous stalking behavior.
Brandon is Delilah's abusive stepfather and a police detective investigating drug dealing at Draycott Academy. He entered Delilah's life months after her father's death, bringing control and violence into her home. Brandon's abuse crushes Delilah's spirit, forcing her to make herself invisible to avoid his attention. His murder by Delilah becomes the catalyst for Logan's blackmail and the novel's central conflict, as Logan uses footage of the killing to manipulate Delilah into a relationship.
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
Obsession equals love and boundaries don't apply when you're 'meant to be' with someone.
Abusers can hide behind badges of authority.
Brandon doesn't want to acknowledge them as full people, only as extensions of himself.
When the abuser holds institutional power, the normal channels for seeking help become closed off.
She plays into the stereotype that a teenage girl wouldn't know how to operate a car jack.
Scomponi le idee chiave di the obsession in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Vivi the obsession attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli il tuo stile di apprendimento e co-crea intuizioni che risuonano davvero con te.

Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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The moment Logan bumps into Delilah Wong at Draycott Academy, his world shifts dramatically. Still drowning in grief over his classmate Sophie's death, Logan sees in Delilah something miraculous-a second chance. Their accidental collision when she cracks his phone screen becomes, in his mind, cosmic intervention. "The name of my destiny," he thinks upon learning her full name, feeling his first genuine smile in months. What begins as attraction quickly spirals into dangerous fixation as Logan researches her extensively online, discovers her address, and begins watching her through her bedroom window. In his twisted perspective, he's not violating her privacy but protecting her. This rationalization reveals the dangerous psychology behind stalking-the belief that obsession equals love and that boundaries don't apply when you're "meant to be" with someone. When Logan discovers Delilah suffers abuse at home from her mother's boyfriend, Detective Brandon Jackson, he doesn't report it. Instead, he sees it as an opportunity to become her savior, installing hidden cameras to monitor her every move. His grief has morphed into a dangerous fixation that will have devastating consequences for both of them.
Detective Brandon Jackson embodies a chilling reality - abusers who exploit positions of authority. As a police officer, he weaponizes the very system designed to protect citizens to control Delilah and her mother. He demands drinks prepared exactly to his specifications, mocks Delilah's deceased father, and creates an environment where both women constantly fear missteps. When ice cubes become unavailable, he uses this trivial issue to demonstrate his power, creating a threatening situation that forces Delilah to flee her home. His casual mention of officers receiving "paid vacation" for accidental killings serves as a veiled threat, reminding them his authority extends beyond their household. This explains their entrapment. When Delilah's friend Aisha suggests reporting him, Delilah immediately dismisses the idea, knowing the futility of accusing a police officer. Their home has transformed from sanctuary to prison, with Brandon controlling their most basic behaviors, denying them autonomy.
When Delilah deliberately trips the car jack, sending Brandon's Camaro crashing down on him, she transforms from victim to survivor. As blood pools beneath the vehicle, she displays strategic thinking under pressure. With Officer Davian, she crafts a believable story: she found Brandon already crushed when she came to ask about groceries. Delilah cleverly exploits sexist assumptions that a teenage girl wouldn't know how to operate a car jack. However, Detective Mendez, Brandon's partner, appears suspicious from the start. After Brandon's death, unexpected relief follows. Delilah notices positive changes: her mother returns to work, wears makeup again, and both carry themselves with renewed confidence. Yet her lack of remorse troubles her. In therapy with Dr. Lee, she admits feeling no guilt. Dr. Lee validates that abuse victims do whatever necessary to survive, though this doesn't fully resolve Delilah's moral conflict. The seemingly perfect crime has one flaw: Logan captured the deliberate act on his secret camera.
Just as Delilah begins to taste freedom after Brandon's death, Logan's blackmail creates a new prison. Their first date at an adventure park initially seems promising-they race through obstacle courses, connecting over shared experiences. This illusion shatters when Delilah pulls Logan in for a kiss. His response-blurting "I love you" and confessing he's loved her since the first day of school-reveals the unhealthy intensity of his feelings. When Delilah recoils, Logan reveals his leverage: the video of Brandon's murder. The confrontation exposes his delusion. He genuinely believes they're soulmates and that he's protecting her rather than exploiting her vulnerability. His twisted logic-that he loves "everything about her," including her capacity for murder-shows how he's romanticized her trauma. When Delilah calls it blackmail, Logan appears scandalized while simultaneously threatening police involvement if she leaves. Delilah's physical response mirrors her reaction to Brandon's abuse-the same feeling of "standing at the edge of a crevasse with monsters lurking below." The blackmail forces her to perform affection as Logan inserts himself into her life, cooking breakfast uninvited and physically guiding her through school.
The revelation that Delilah bears an uncanny resemblance to Logan's deceased classmate Sophie adds a disturbing dimension to his obsession. When Aisha shows Delilah photos, she's stunned to discover not just similar Asian features, but a striking likeness to Sophie - a beautiful, vibrant girl who appeared in numerous photos with friends, contrasting with Delilah's initially subdued demeanor. This forces Delilah to confront the truth: Logan isn't attracted to her as an individual but as Sophie's replacement. Under the influence of drugs Delilah secretly feeds him, Logan begins conflating them, calling Delilah by Sophie's name - revealing how his obsession stems from unresolved grief. The parallels extend beyond appearance. When Logan breaks into Delilah's bedroom, touching her possessions and lying on her bed, he recalls doing the same in Sophie's room after her death. As his mental health deteriorates, he hears Sophie's voice, believing she "sent" Delilah "as a gift," further objectifying both women.
Faced with Logan's control and Detective Mendez's suspicions, Delilah transforms from hunted to hunter. She begins with cupcakes laced with MDMA and Ambien - exploiting Logan's sweet tooth by disguising the drugs with extra sugar and coffee. As she increases his dosage, she watches him develop anxiety and paranoia, thinking: "I'm the predator, and he's the helpless rat facing a snake." Delilah's plan extends to framing Logan as the school's drug dealer. While searching his room for the incriminating video, she plants pills throughout his dorm that would destroy his credibility if he exposed her. Moral complications arise when she endangers her friend Aisha as a distraction. After Logan grabs Aisha violently, Delilah acknowledges: "I'm turning into a monster." The culmination - murdering Logan by drugging his hot chocolate and holding his head underwater - completes her transformation. Her clinical disposal of evidence reveals chilling detachment, though she briefly acknowledges her conflict before justifying it as necessary for freedom.
"The Obsession" portrays a world where heroes and villains blur into predators and prey, with characters embodying both roles. Brandon, a police officer, abuses his authority to terrorize Delilah and her mother. When Delilah causes his death, she shifts from prey to predator. Logan continues this pattern by blackmailing her with evidence of Brandon's murder, controlling her through fear while claiming protection. Delilah completes the cycle by drugging and ultimately killing Logan - another transformation from victim to perpetrator. Her realization that she enjoys eliminating predators raises a crucial question: has she broken the cycle or perpetuated it? What might we become when pushed to survival's edge? When predators wear badges or claim to love us, the most terrifying transformation may be within ourselves. When systems fail and protectors become oppressors, what boundaries would you cross for freedom? Delilah's journey from victim to vigilante confronts uncomfortable truths about justice and survival. The haunting question isn't whether her actions were justified, but if anyone can truly escape violence once they've become part of it.