Plot Summary
Haunted Beginnings
Logan, a student at elite Draycott Academy, is haunted by the death of Sophie, a girl he was obsessed with but never truly dated. His grief is all-consuming, and he struggles to rejoin school life, feeling like a ghost among the living. Meanwhile, Delilah Wong, a new student, arrives at Draycott, carrying her own burdens: her father's death, her mother's abusive boyfriend Brandon, and the weight of being an outsider. Both teens are marked by trauma and loss, setting the stage for their fateful collision.
The Watcher's Web
Logan's fixation shifts from Sophie to Delilah, who reminds him of his lost love. He stalks her online, learns everything about her, and even begins physically watching her at home, convinced he's meant to save her. Delilah, meanwhile, is just trying to survive Brandon's abuse and her mother's denial. Logan's "protection" is invasive and delusional, but he sees himself as a romantic hero, not a predator.
Home Is Not Safe
Delilah's home life is a minefield. Brandon, a cop, controls her mother and terrorizes Delilah, using his authority to shield himself from consequences. Delilah's mother is trapped by fear and financial dependence. Delilah's only solace is her job at the school library, where she finds a mentor in Lisa, the librarian, and a lifeline in her best friend Aisha. But even these safe spaces are threatened by the secrets she keeps and the dangers lurking at home.
Obsession Ignites
A chance encounter between Logan and Delilah sparks Logan's obsession into overdrive. He engineers opportunities to interact with her, using his knowledge of her interests to create a sense of connection. Delilah, wary but lonely, is drawn to Logan's attention, not realizing the depth of his fixation. Their interactions are charged with tension, as Logan's need for control and Delilah's need for safety clash beneath the surface.
Secrets and Survival
Delilah's life spirals as Brandon's abuse escalates. She takes a job with Lisa that turns out to be a front for a drug operation, rationalizing her involvement as a means of escape. Meanwhile, Logan's surveillance intensifies; he installs cameras and collects evidence, convinced he's protecting Delilah. Both are trapped—Delilah by her circumstances, Logan by his delusions.
The Accident That Wasn't
Brandon's violence reaches a breaking point. In a moment of rage and desperation, Delilah causes a fatal "accident," crushing Brandon under his own car. She is shocked by her own capacity for violence but feels little remorse—only relief. The police, including Brandon's partner Mendez, accept the death as an accident, but Delilah is haunted by the secret and the fear of discovery.
Guilt, Grief, and Games
Delilah and her mother struggle to adjust to life without Brandon, oscillating between guilt and liberation. Therapy offers some solace, but Delilah's sense of safety is fragile. Logan, having captured the "accident" on video, realizes Delilah's secret and is both awed and further obsessed. He now holds the ultimate leverage over her, shifting the power dynamic in their relationship.
The Stalker Revealed
Logan confronts Delilah with the video, professing his love and demanding a relationship in exchange for his silence. Delilah is horrified but trapped; she cannot risk exposure. Logan's obsession is reframed as devotion, and he manipulates Delilah into a coerced romance, believing he is saving her. Delilah, desperate, plays along while searching for a way out.
Blackmail and Bargains
Delilah tries to reclaim control, testing Logan's threats and seeking help from Aisha. She discovers Logan's pattern of obsession—his fixation on Sophie ended in tragedy, and now she is the new object. Delilah's attempts to break free are met with escalating manipulation. She realizes that as long as Logan holds the video, she is not safe.
The Snake and the Rat
Inspired by a biology class observation of a snake devouring a rat, Delilah decides to become the predator. She begins drugging Logan with a mix of MDMA and Ambien, destabilizing him. She frames him as the school's drug dealer, planting evidence in his room. Delilah's transformation from victim to schemer is complete—she is willing to do whatever it takes to survive.
Framing the Predator
Delilah and Aisha break into Logan's room, planting drugs and searching for the incriminating video. Delilah realizes the video is hidden in Logan's ever-present pendant. Meanwhile, Detective Mendez closes in on the school's drug operation, and Lisa, the librarian, grows suspicious of Delilah's actions. The web of secrets tightens, and Delilah's plan teeters on the edge of exposure.
The Final Confrontation
Logan, unraveling from the drugs and the pressure, is expelled after a violent outburst. Delilah lures him to the river under the pretense of reconciliation. Logan, in a final gesture of trust, destroys the video, believing it will cement their love. But Delilah, seizing her chance, pushes him into the river and drowns him, ensuring her freedom at last.
Predator Becomes Prey
Delilah is shaken but resolute. She covers her tracks, frames Logan for the drug operation, and secures an alibi from Lisa. Detective Mendez is left with more questions than answers. Delilah reflects on her transformation—from prey to predator—and the cost of survival. She is free, but forever changed.
Freedom's Price
With Logan and Brandon gone, Delilah and her mother are finally safe. Delilah prepares to leave for college, carrying the weight of her actions. She has learned that survival sometimes demands monstrous choices, and that freedom is never free. The story ends with Delilah embracing her new life, haunted but unbroken, determined to never be prey again.
Characters
Logan
Logan is a deeply troubled teen whose grief over Sophie's death mutates into a pathological obsession with Delilah. He is intelligent, manipulative, and skilled at presenting a charming facade, but beneath lies a desperate need for control and connection. Logan's inability to distinguish love from possession drives him to stalk, surveil, and ultimately blackmail Delilah. His psychological unraveling is marked by delusional thinking (erotomania), escalating paranoia, and a willingness to destroy anyone who threatens his fantasy. Logan's arc is a chilling study in how trauma, entitlement, and unchecked obsession can turn a victim into a predator.
Delilah Wong
Delilah is a biracial teen caught between cultures and crises. Traumatized by her father's death and Brandon's abuse, she is resourceful, intelligent, and fiercely protective of her mother. Delilah's journey is one of transformation: from passive victim to active agent of her own fate. She is forced to make impossible choices—killing Brandon in self-defense, enduring Logan's blackmail, and ultimately orchestrating his downfall. Delilah's psychological complexity lies in her capacity for both compassion and ruthlessness, her guilt and her resolve. She is a survivor who learns to wield the tools of her oppressors to secure her freedom.
Brandon Jackson
Brandon is Delilah's mother's boyfriend, a police officer who uses his authority to terrorize and control. He is physically and emotionally abusive, exploiting the family's vulnerability after Delilah's father's death. Brandon's presence is a constant threat, and his demise is both a moment of liberation and a source of lasting trauma for Delilah and her mother. He embodies the dangers of unchecked power and the insidiousness of domestic abuse.
Delilah's Mother (Ally)
Ally is a woman shattered by loss and abuse. Her inability to protect herself or Delilah from Brandon is a source of deep guilt and self-loathing. She oscillates between denial and despair, but after Brandon's death, she begins to reclaim her agency. Her relationship with Delilah is fraught but ultimately loving, and her journey mirrors her daughter's struggle to break free from cycles of victimhood.
Aisha Johnson
Aisha is Delilah's best friend, a source of support, humor, and occasional tough love. She is perceptive, brave, and willing to risk her own safety to help Delilah. Aisha's presence grounds Delilah, offering a glimpse of normalcy and hope. Her loyalty is unwavering, but she is also a mirror, reflecting Delilah's growing darkness and the moral cost of survival.
Lisa Smith
Lisa is the school librarian and Delilah's boss, outwardly the epitome of harmlessness. In reality, she runs a drug operation out of the library, exploiting vulnerable students like Delilah. Lisa is cunning, pragmatic, and ultimately self-serving. Her relationship with Delilah is transactional, and when threatened, she is quick to cut ties. Lisa represents the hidden dangers lurking beneath respectable facades.
Detective Mendez
Mendez is Brandon's former partner, a persistent and perceptive cop who suspects foul play in both Brandon's death and the school's drug trade. She is empathetic but relentless, circling ever closer to the truth. Mendez's presence is a constant source of anxiety for Delilah, embodying the threat of exposure and the limits of institutional justice.
Sophie
Sophie is the girl whose death haunts Logan and sets the story in motion. She is never present in the narrative, but her memory shapes Logan's obsession and Delilah's fate. Sophie's life and death are a cautionary tale about the dangers of being objectified and consumed by others' needs.
Josh
Josh is Logan's best friend, loyal but increasingly concerned by Logan's behavior. He represents the bystander—aware of something wrong but unsure how to intervene. Josh's inability to save Logan or Delilah is a quiet tragedy, highlighting the limits of friendship in the face of obsession.
Moni, Tonya, Hannah
These girls are part of Logan's friend group, offering Delilah a glimpse of normal teenage life. Their interactions with Delilah reveal the social hierarchies and pressures of Draycott, as well as the ease with which predators can hide in plain sight.
Plot Devices
Dual Narration
The story is told in alternating first-person chapters from Logan and Delilah, allowing readers to inhabit both the mind of the obsessed and the object of obsession. This structure creates dramatic irony, tension, and empathy, as we see how each character justifies their actions and misreads the other.
Unreliable Narrators
Both Logan and Delilah are unreliable narrators, shaped by trauma, fear, and self-deception. Logan's delusions and rationalizations blur the line between love and control, while Delilah's guilt and desperation color her perceptions. The reader is left to piece together the truth from their conflicting accounts.
Foreshadowing and Parallels
The narrative is rich with foreshadowing—Logan's obsession with Sophie prefigures his fixation on Delilah; Delilah's observation of the snake and rat in biology class prefigures her own transformation from prey to predator. The story is structured around cycles of abuse, obsession, and survival, with each character's fate echoing another's.
Symbolism
Animals (snakes, rats, dogs) and motifs of cages, surveillance, and escape recur throughout the novel, symbolizing the shifting dynamics of power and vulnerability. The river, the car, and the library are all charged with symbolic meaning—sites of death, transformation, and revelation.
Blackmail and Leverage
The plot is driven by secrets—Logan's video, Delilah's involvement in the drug trade, Lisa's criminal enterprise. Blackmail becomes the primary means of control, with each character seeking leverage over the others. The constant threat of exposure creates a climate of paranoia and desperation.
Moral Ambiguity
The story resists easy moral judgments. Delilah's actions—killing Brandon, framing Logan, orchestrating his death—are both condemnable and understandable. Logan is both a victim of trauma and a perpetrator of violence. The novel asks whether survival justifies monstrous acts, and whether freedom can ever be clean.
Analysis
Jesse Q. Sutanto's The Obsession is a razor-sharp psychological thriller that interrogates the boundaries between love and control, victimhood and agency, and justice and survival. Through its dual narration, the novel immerses readers in the minds of both the stalker and the stalked, exposing the ways trauma can warp perception and drive desperate acts. Sutanto subverts the typical "girl in peril" narrative by granting Delilah the power to fight back, but at a steep moral cost—her transformation from prey to predator is both triumphant and chilling. The book critiques the failures of authority figures (parents, police, school) to protect the vulnerable, and the ways in which abusers exploit systems of power. Ultimately, The Obsession is a meditation on the price of freedom: to escape one monster, Delilah must become one herself. The novel's lesson is both empowering and unsettling—sometimes, to survive, you must be willing to do the unthinkable, but the scars of that survival never fully fade.
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Review Summary
The Obsession received mixed reviews, with an average rating of 3.71 out of 5. Many readers found it suspenseful and fast-paced, comparing it to the TV show "You" for a YA audience. The dual perspectives of Logan and Delilah were praised for their intensity and complexity. Some critics felt the plot was predictable or lacked depth, while others appreciated the unexpected twists. The book's exploration of stalking, obsession, and revenge resonated with many readers, though some found the content disturbing. Overall, it was described as a gripping, if unsettling, YA thriller.
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