Louise O’Neill is a bestselling author from Clonakilty,
West Cork. Her debut novel, Only Ever Yours, won multiple awards
including the Sunday Independent Newcomer of the Year and the
inaugural YA Book Prize. Her second novel, Asking For It, spent 52
consecutive weeks in the Irish top 10 and was awarded the Michael L
Printz honour by the American Library Association.
She has since published The Surface Breaks, a feminist retelling of
The Little Mermaid, which was shortlisted for the Specsavers
National Book Awards, and three novels for adults: Almost Love,
After the Silence — named Crime Novel of the Year at the Irish Book
Awards 2020 — and Idol, which went straight into the Irish book
charts at #1. Her memoir, A Bigger Life, is coming in autumn 2026.
Whatever Happened to Madeline Stone? is her latest novel.
An absolute page turner; addictive and refreshingly twisted.
*Cecelia Ahern*
By turns utterly gripping and unsettling, this gorgeously written
novel is a fascinating look at the ills of influencer culture. A
book for our times.
*Lucy Foley*
IDOL is darkly delicious and asks important questions of fame,
influence, self-help and what it really means when we click
"follow". Louise O'Neill is one of those rare authors whose writing
grips you from the first page, but who also makes you think. I will
read anything she writes.
*Elizabeth Day*
Louise O'Neill steps into areas that lesser writers are daunted by.
She is a pioneer.
*Marian Keyes*
O'Neill continues to push at the murk around contemporary taboos,
shining a compassionate and compelling light on what drives our
appearance-obsessed society, marking us all as complicit. IDOL is a
gripping, shocking read I could not put down.
*Kiran Millwood Hargrave*
IDOL is utterly compelling and totally fearless. I literally had to
ban myself from reading it after 8pm as I couldn't sleep otherwise.
Louise isn't afraid to grasp nettles and IDOL is a confronting
exploration of toxic female friendships, consent, and the gross
hypocrisy of influencer culture. Destined to be rightly huge. It
will take a long time to get these characters out of my head.
*Holly Bourne*
Compulsive, disturbing and totally addictive, I couldn't put IDOL
down. No-one writes the dark extremes of womanhood like Louise
O'Neill and I think this might be her best novel yet.
*Juno Dawson*
Sharp and sharply plotted, muscular, propulsive, visceral. So good
on illusion and self-delusion; the lies we tell ourselves and each
other; the damage of toxic friendships, and the legacy of betrayal
or imagined betrayal. There were phrases that stopped me in my
tracks, they resonated so hard. I hope it flies far higher than
Samantha Miller.
*Sarah Vaughan*
I read it in one sitting! Louise has a way of making her characters
deliciously, unapologetically human and gloriously messy. Sometimes
you want to look away but it's impossible. IDOL is her best
yet.
*Angela Scanlon*
Electrifying. I devoured IDOL in two greedy gulps - it is so
smartly and sharply observed. It's going to stay with me for a
long, long time - Louise's writing is so compelling, gripping and
addictive.
*Daisy Buchanan, Sunday Times bestselling author of INSATIABLE*
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