ThrillerMysteryPsychological Fiction

Paula Hawkins

British · b. 1972

1 book reviewed Avg rating 3.9 / 5 Top rating 3.9 / 5

Paula Hawkins is a British author whose psychological thriller The Girl on the Train became a global publishing phenomenon, selling over 23 million copies and cementing her place in the domestic noir genre.

Paula Hawkins worked as a financial journalist before publishing The Girl on the Train in 2015, a book that became one of the fastest-selling debut adult novels in British publishing history. The novel follows Rachel, an alcoholic woman who takes the same commuter train every day and becomes obsessed with a couple she sees from the window — until one of them disappears. Told from multiple unreliable female perspectives, the book is firmly in the post-Gone Girl domestic noir tradition: suburban settings, secrets, gaslighting, and women whose credibility is systematically undermined.

Hawkins handles the unreliable narrator mechanics with considerable skill, and the pacing is excellent — the book’s short chapters and rotating perspectives create momentum that is difficult to step away from. The central mystery is well-constructed, and the portrait of Rachel’s alcoholism and the humiliations it produces is more honest than the genre typically manages. The book’s feminist undertones — about how women’s accounts are dismissed, about the specific vulnerabilities of isolation — give it more substance than a pure plot exercise.

The Girl on the Train does not hold up as closely on rereading as some thrillers — the twist, once known, reduces the clue-work — and Hawkins’ subsequent novels have not matched its commercial or critical reception. But as a single-sitting thriller that combines genuine plot competence with something to say about its female characters, it earned its reputation and helped establish a mode of psychological fiction that dominated popular fiction for the better part of a decade.

1 Book Reviewed

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