The
Young Adult novel, which was published on Nov. 25 by Atria/Keywords Press in
the U.S. and by Penguin in the U.K., sold more than 78,000 copies in its first
week, the highest number of sales in the first week recorded by Nielsen
BookScan since they began recording information six years ago, according to The
Bookseller. First-week sales for Girl Online, which
has been billed as a modern-day Notting Hill for teens, have
even eclipsed the first-week sales from the debuts of J.K. Rowling, Dan Brown
and EL James.
Commenting on the book’s
strong debut, Sugg, who has 2.6 million followers on Twitter, said in a
statement, “It’s such an amazing feeling. I’m so grateful to everyone who has
bought a copy of Girl Online. I love that so many of my viewers are
enjoying the book! This year has been so exciting and this for sure is the
icing on the cake.”
Sugg, who is widely known
by her blog name, Zoella, first rose to fame with her beauty and make-up
tutorials, attracting millions of views from a young and loyal fanbase. When
she first started her blog in early 2009 she wrote posts about beauty products
she liked or her shopping trips. But before long she branched out and started
vlogging (video blogging). Her upbeat, unpretentious tips and tutorials — where
she’d demonstrate how to perfect a messy bun or share
which drugstore cosmetics she loves — proved
popular with her young fans. Sugg then started vlogging about weightier issues
such as body image, anxiety and panic attacks and
offering life advice for her devoted viewers, cementing her role as an
inspiration and idol for millions of young girls.
And thanks to her sunny disposition and
wholesome lifestyle — Sugg is vocal about the fact that she doesn’t drink or do
drugs — Zoella’s approval rating with parents of young girls also sky-rocketed.
In theTelegraph, writer Judith Woods, whose
young daughter counts herself among Sugg’s many fans, pronounced the young star
“The Perfect Role Model.”
But 2014
has been the year when things really exploded for Sugg offline as well. Not
only did she secure a two-book deal with Penguin — Girl Online’s sequel is due
out next year — she scored the Teen Choice Award for Choice Web Star: Fashion and
Beauty, appeared inBritish Vogue, launched her own line of beauty
products and was even asked by Bob Geldof to sing on the Band Aid charity
single for Ebola along with Bono, One Direction and Ed Sheeran.
As her
star has risen, Sugg has met some backlash. A handful of British journalists
and other bloggers have criticized Sugg and her burgeoning empire. A writer for the Independent described Sugg’s persona as
“sickly sweet” and wondered why the vlogger didn’t “encourage kids to spend
their pocket money on books or days out with friends, rather than on the latest
liquid eyeliner.” Meanwhile, in the Telegraph, a piece described Sugg as “both
a product and a figurehead of a generation that is obsessed with staying safe,”
not to mention “infuriatingly bland and intimidatingly perfect.”
Not that
her fans are swayed by the criticism; tickets for her Girl Online book signings across the U.K. last
week sold out within 24 hours. It’s hard to imagine that even Sugg would be
bothered by a few naysayers. In an interview with the Financial Times, Sugg reflected on her
exploding fame, saying, “I never expected any of this to happen so I’m just
going to go with it and make the most of it.”
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