All in Mysteries and Thrillers
I recently added this book to my reading list based on several recommendations and then I spotted it in a Little Free Library in my neighborhood. So, after slogging my way through Donna Tart’s The Secret History, I wanted a book I could fly through and The Silent Patient definitely delivered.
I kicked off my beach reads a little early this year and devoured this book during an amazing weekend away for a friend’s wedding. A swirling mix of suspense, psychological mystery, romance and coming of age, there was nothing I didn’t love about The House in the Pines. Except maybe how stressed I got reading the last 75 pages!
Because I thought Rebecca Makkai’s The Great Believers was such a great read (read review here), I couldn’t wait to read I Have Some Questions for You. Although the two books are very different, I Have Some Questions triumphs as well. Where The Great Believers uses historical fiction to develop a story about the AIDS epidemic and its effects on a network of friends, I Have Some Questions falls somewhere between a psychological thriller and a mystery.
Thinking about my favorite kind of novels, I must admit that mysteries fall towards the bottom of my list. I feel like I’m not good at keeping track of all the clues that should lead me to figure out “who done it” before the writer actually reveals the killer. I know I’ve said this before, but this is one of the reasons why I love being in a book club. We make our book selections and inevitably some of those books I would never have read on my own. And guess what? Sometimes I really enjoy the books. Louise Penny’s Still Life is a perfect example of this phenomenon.
I’m not sure how I happened to pick up this book. I hadn’t read Kim’s previous book Miracle Creek, but I’m definitely going to read it now. Happiness Falls is one of the best psychological thrillers that I can remember reading—ever. Written at a suitably fast clip, Kim had me exclaiming out loud several times, as well as rereading previous pages to make sure that what I thought had just happened had actually happened.
The Widow is definitely what celebrity chef and influencer Serena Wolf would call a “medium trashy novel.” She often reviews and recommends books of this type on her instagram. I think Wolf would define “medium trashy” as not requiring much effort to read, with a plot that may be somewhat silly, but the writing is good and you thoroughly enjoy yourself. That definition fits The Widow perfectly.
Peter Heller has quickly become one of my “go-to” authors. When I see that he’s written a new book, I can’t wait to get my hands on it and read it. And again with The Guide, Heller has written a beautiful, well-crafted thriller.
I was fascinated by the idea that Hillary Clinton had paired up with Louise Penny, a famous detective story writer, to co-write State of Terror, her first fictional book. Turns out the two women had formed a real friendship years ago, so when a friend suggested they team up and that friend had worked with Bill Clinton and James Patterson on two thrillers they co-wrote, Hillary agreed. State of Terror is the gripping political thriller resulting from that partnership.
I believe I picked up The Guest List after Reece Witherspoon chose it for her book club, which was a while ago. And although I’m not usually one for murder mysteries, Lucy Foley and Reece do not disappoint. Engaging and suspenseful as all top-notch mysteries are, Foley also writes well and develops characters I genuinely cared about.
When I picked up Into The Water, I was looking for fluff—something that would keep me engaged and turning pages without challenging me to think about much except what might happen next. Based on having read and loved Hawkins’ previous smash hit, The Girl On The Train, I figured this would probably fit the bill.
Paula Hawkins’ latest psychological thriller A Slow Fire Burning rises to the amazing, disturbing, yet wonderful heights of her breakthrough novel, The Girl on the Train. In A Slow Fire Burning, Hawkins has developed three memorable main characters, all women who are deeply troubled by the tragedies they’ve experienced in their lives.
For someone who alleges not to enjoy mysteries, I find myself recommending two more this month! Apples Never Fall is Liane Moriarty’s latest novel and perhaps her best. Moriarty tells the story of the Delaney family: Stan and Joy, a seemingly perfect couple who have been happily married for 50 years and their four adult children, all successfully launched into their own lives. Life is good for the Delaneys until Joy disappears one day, leaving no note. After two weeks, foul play is suspected and all signs point to Stan as the guilty party.
If you’re a faithful reader of the L&L Review, then you know that crime novels and mysteries are not my go-to types of book. When the Stars Go Dark is both – and it is gripping. McLain’s novel reminded me of Northern Spy by Flynn Berry (reviewed June 17, 2021), perhaps because both books’ main characters work brilliantly to resolve the mystery of crimes, while dealing with the all-too-familiar, but very real, stresses of motherhood and family.
As our first book, we decided to read The Alienist by Caleb Carr, a whodunit set in New York City at the end of the 19th century when both psychological analyses of criminals and forensics were in their infancy.
Although I have never reviewed Caleb Carr’s earlier book, The Alienist, I find myself recommending it all the time to people who want an engrossing, fast-paced and smart book. Its wide appeal is, I’m sure, why Amazon Prime made a series out of it. It took me a few years to read the sequel, The Angel of Darkness, but I was not disappointed.
It’s hard to categorize this book, and I am sure I have never read another one like it. Part mystery, part thriller, part brain teaser, every page you turn the story gets weirder and more engrossing.
Psychological thriller is not a genre I gravitate toward with any regularity. So when my Bates Boston Alumna book club selected The Woman in the Windowas one of our reads, I wasn’t sure I’d enjoy it. Well, it is a page-turner and a book that you will have a very hard time putting down until you’ve figured out all the story’s twists and turns.
At the other end of the spectrum of writing, this suspenseful beach read will keep you turning the pages with ease.
Suspenseful. A psychological thriller. Chilling. These are some of the reviewers’ comments on this debut novel by S. J. Watson. I’m not normally drawn to this genre of writing, but the premise intrigued me. The main character, Christine, has a neurological condition whereupon she wakes up each morning not remembering anything or anyone from the previous 25 years of her life.