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One boyband sensation with a tragic secret. One adoring fan determined to uncover it . . . Lonely college student Minnie feels invisible until she stumbles upon HOURglass- America's new K-pop inspired boyband obsession. Soon she is memorising the lyrics to every song and staying up late to watch their livestreams, hoping that her favourite member, bad-boy Halo, will see her in the comments. On the other side of the screen, Halo is also becoming addicted to the adoration from his fans, using their love to paper over the cracks of the tragic past he is determined to keep hidden. But when Minnie is drawn to a shadowy fan community who believe they need to protect the band members from a dark conspiracy, the line between fandom and obsession begins to blur...

Details

ISBN13: 9780241726785
Format: Paperback / softback
Number of Pages: 336
Edition:
Publication Date: 24 Feb 2026
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Publication City, Country: London, United Kingdom
Dimensions (cm): 23.3(H)x15.1(L)x2.6(W)414
Weight (gm): 414

Author Biography

Jenny Tinghui Zhang is a Chinese-American writer. She was born in Changchun, China and grew up in Austin, Texas, where she currently lives. Her debut, Four Treasures of the Sky, was a New York Times Notable Book and Editor's Choice, and was longlisted for the Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction and the Dublin Literary Award. Superfan is her second novel.

Reviews

SUPERFAN riveted me. I was a frog being boiled as Zhang pulled me page by page into the book's orbit, with writing that is deceptively perceptive, yearning, and engaging all at once. SUPERFAN is not only an insightful examination of the all-encompassing natures of fandom and stardom, it's a story about ultimately learning to feel whole. -- Rachel Khong, New York Times bestselling author of Real Americans
As catchy, appealing, and achingly tender as a boy band's hit ballad, Superfan dazzles and captivates, while raising vital questions about fandom, celebrity, and the performance of self. Jenny Tinghui Zhang captures the complexities of emerging adulthood in all its tenuous glory. * Kirstin Chen, New York Times bestselling author of Counterfeit *
Superfan was addictive and seductive. It perfectly captures the loneliness of youth, the allure of online community, and the dangers of obsession. I read it and immediately wanted to recommend it to all of my friends. * Tasha Coryell, author of Love Letters to a Serial Killer *
Breathtaking and heartfelt, SUPERFAN is a cosmic collision of two fractured lives pulled into each other’s orbit through an astonishing series of events. With an eye for both the personal and the universal, Zhang reveals how the past and present versions of ourselves can never be outrun—with consequences as devastating as they are redemptive. SUPERFAN doesn’t just redefine the fan-star relationship, it explodes it from the inside out. * Elaine Hsieh Chou, author of Disorientation *

Zhang swerves from her breakout Wild West-set debut, 'Four Treasures of the Sky,' to a more
contemporary subject: a lonely, Chinese American college freshman in 2010s Texas who forges
an intense parasocial attachment to a K-pop-style boy band. (And those boys, as a parallel
narrative shows, are facing emotional turmoil of their own.)

* The New York Times (27 Books Coming in February) *

Between the Taylor Swift effect, BTS fever, and the rise (and rise) of Heated Rivalry, fandoms
are having a moment—making it the perfect time to dig into Jenny Tinghui Zhang’s alternately
heartrending and thrilling new novel.

* Vogue *

Jenny Tinghui Zhang’s compelling novel smartly explores interconnected themes of loneliness,
connection, and obsessive fandom…Superfan is a touching modern coming-of-age story.

* Apple (February Favorites Staff Pick) *

Achingly relatable…Zhang pulls at the troubled threads of what it means to be and to have
admirers from a brightly colored quilt of internet-informed contemporary fiction… Zhang
punctuates chapters with numbered posts from that world, internet snippets convincingly riddled
with fan fiction terms and forum keywords illustrating the peculiar, at times perilous, position of
fans among their idols…Superfan ponders what it means to be a fangirl and decides that it’s
bigger, always, than the boys themselves.

* The Austin Chronicle *

Zhang digs deep into modern fandom and the ways technology encourages fans’ parasocial
relationships in this sensitive, nuanced portrait of two misfits searching for a place to
belong
...Teens will empathize with Minnie's struggle to fit in and her experience of finding
connection and discord in online fan culture.

* Booklist (starred review) *

Equally dark and dazzling, like a spotlight flickering on a dim stage. This is a book I’ll be
recommending to all my coolest friends.

* LitHub *
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