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Hooked

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Pub Date Mar 12 2026 | Archive Date Feb 24 2026


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Description

‘Tender and thrilling it’s Yuzuki at her best’ ELLE

‘I couldn't stop reading’ COSTANZA CASATI

‘Unsettling, compelling, richly written’ JODIE HARSH

‘Dark, tender, unforgettable’ JANE CASEY

The unmissable new novel of friendship and dangerous obsession from Asako Yuzuki, the award-winning author of the global bestselling sensation Butter.

Eriko really wouldn't mind being savaged, if it was her best friend doing the savaging …

Eriko's life appears perfect – devoted parents, pristine apartment and a high-flying job in the seafood division of one of Japan's largest trading companies. Her latest project, to reintroduce the controversial Nile perch fish into the Japanese market, is characteristically ambitious. But beneath her flawless surface she is wracked by loneliness.

Eriko becomes fascinated with a popular blog written by a housewife, Shōko. Shōko’s posts about eating convenience-store food and her untidy home are the opposite of the typical Japanese housewife’s manicured lifestyle. When Eriko tracks Shōko down at her favourite restaurant and befriends her, Shōko is at first charmed by her new companion. But soon Eriko's obsession with Shōko begins to spiral out of control, threatening her carefully laid plans. How far will she go to hold on to the best friend she’s ever had?

Beautifully translated by Polly Barton, Hooked is an unsettling story of the line between friendship and dangerous obsession, and a delicious exploration of food, loneliness and womanhood in contemporary Japan.

A most anticipated book of 2026 in Vogue, Guardian, New York Times, Forbes, The Times, Sunday Times Style, Elle, Stylist, BBC, Grazia, Bricks Magazine, Radio Times, LitHub, Oprah Daily and Daily Express.

‘The kind of book you press into your friends’ hands, desperate to dissect it’ ERIN KELLY, author of The House of Mirrors

‘An exciting new thriller that you won't be able to put down’ RADIO TIMES

‘Expect to see this distinctive pink cover everywhere’ GRAZIA

‘[A] razor-edged story about women, appetite and what we'll do to feel chosen … Safe to say, we're already hooked’ OPRAH DAILY

‘No one writes about the hidden depths and lurking monstrosities of womanhood quite like Asako Yuzuki’ ALICE SLATER, author of Let the Bad Times Roll

‘A thrilling and deliciously sharp examination of the extremes of female friendship. Achingly tender and wickedly funny’ EDEL COFFEY, author of In Glass Houses

‘Dark, spiny and slippery, this haunting tale of loneliness and longing in the modern age will leave you gasping’ TOBI COVENTRY, author of He’s the Devil

‘Tender and thrilling it’s Yuzuki at her best’ ELLE

‘I couldn't stop reading’ COSTANZA CASATI

‘Unsettling, compelling, richly written’ JODIE...


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Average rating from 11 members


Featured Reviews

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This book really highlights the loneliness epidemic that's happening. As well as the parasocial relationships and workplace relations that people have. Eriko is around 30 and is essentially friendless and finds it rather hard to form human connections. It doesn't seem like many people in the workplace like her which is interesting and things do turn ugly later on.

Parasocial relationships. Oh boy, this one is kinda scary because it's told from both POVs which is interesting to get the stalkers viewpoint. But this stalker goes to EXTREMES. *COUGH COUGH BLACKMAIL* I feel for Shoko who is stuck with Eriko as she can't really escape. But it's also a lession learnt for how much you put up on the internet as Eriko figured out where Shoko was living based on the surrounding restaurants and a brick wall. (Creepy af)

But Asako's writing style is absolutely gorgeous, I adore all of the similes and language used to describe the world, which makes it vivid. AND THE SYMBOLISM. *CHEFS KISS*

I think this book is meant to make you uncomfortable and be realistic with the obsession people can have as they get hooked on the idea that they see someone as a friend when really they're a stranger.

I definitely recommend it for those who have read butter and enjoyed it as well as fans of Japanese literature.

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