Editors Reads

Best Psychological Thriller Books

81 expert-reviewed books — page 3 of 4

The Turn of the Key book cover
4.2

Rowan Caine writes a letter from prison, claiming to be innocent of the child's death she is accused of. She was a nanny at a remote Scottish smart-house — a high-tech home that watched her every move, recorded every conversation, and whose previous nannies kept leaving without explanation. A locked-room thriller for the surveillance age.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Washington Square book cover

Washington Square

by Henry James

4.2

A plain, good-natured heiress in 1840s New York is courted by a charming fortune hunter — with her sardonic, brilliant father watching and diagnosing everything.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Dark Places book cover

Dark Places

by Gillian Flynn

4.1

Libby Day survived the massacre of her family when she was seven years old and testified that her teenage brother Ben was responsible. Twenty-five years later, a true crime enthusiast group called the Kill Club convinces her to reinvestigate — and what she uncovers suggests the conviction was built on a child's traumatized misremembering.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Deep Water book cover

Deep Water

by Patricia Highsmith

4.1

Vic Van Allen is the model suburban husband — except that he allows his wife Melinda to carry on a series of affairs openly, to prevent her from leaving him. When one of her lovers is found dead, Vic lets it be known that he killed him. He didn't — but the bluff establishes something. A portrait of suburban American life as a theatre of controlled violence, and one of Highsmith's most chilling studies in the psychology of a particular kind of man.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Ripley Under Ground book cover

Ripley Under Ground

by Patricia Highsmith

4.1

Tom Ripley has settled into comfortable French country life at his villa Belle Ombre with his wealthy wife Héloïse. He is co-managing a scheme to sell forged paintings attributed to a dead artist named Derwatt. When an American collector arrives convinced the paintings are fraudulent, Ripley must manage the situation — which escalates, as Ripley situations always do. The second Ripley novel, fifteen years after The Talented Mr. Ripley.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Sharp Objects book cover

Sharp Objects

by Gillian Flynn

4.1

Crime journalist Camille Preaker is sent back to her small Missouri hometown to cover the murders of two young girls, and back into the orbit of her controlling mother Adora and half-sister Amma. Flynn's debut is a novel about women's violence against women, and the ways trauma writes itself permanently on the body.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Shutter Island book cover

Shutter Island

by Dennis Lehane

4.1

US Marshal Teddy Daniels arrives at Ashecliffe Hospital for the criminally insane on Shutter Island to investigate the disappearance of a patient — and finds himself questioning his own grip on reality as the investigation deepens and the island refuses to give up its secrets.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The It Girl book cover

The It Girl

by Ruth Ware

4.1

Ten years ago, Hannah's Oxford roommate April — beautiful, charismatic, and impossible to ignore — was murdered by the college porter. The case seemed closed. Now the porter has died in prison claiming innocence, and new evidence suggests the wrong man was convicted. Hannah must revisit the most disorienting year of her life.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Lost Daughter book cover

The Lost Daughter

by Elena Ferrante

4.1

Leda, a middle-aged professor, takes a solo holiday on the Ionian coast and becomes obsessed with a young mother and her daughter on the beach — an obsession that forces her to confront the choices she made as a young mother herself. A novella about maternal ambivalence, guilt, and the parts of ourselves we cannot reconcile.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Zero Days book cover

Zero Days

by Ruth Ware

4.1

A penetration tester comes home to find her husband murdered — and herself the prime suspect. On the run and armed only with her hacking skills, Jacintha Cross must clear her name before the police close in. Ruth Ware delivers a breathless, propulsive chase thriller.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Beauty and Sadness book cover

Beauty and Sadness

by Yasunari Kawabata

4.0

A novelist travels to Kyoto to hear the New Year's bell and reconnect with his former lover, now a celebrated painter. But she has sent her young student in her place—and the student has her own agenda. The novel becomes a story of obsession, revenge, and the destruction that art can carry. Kawabata's darkest novel.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Edith's Diary book cover

Edith's Diary

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

Edith Howland keeps a diary. In it, her son Cliffie is successful, married, fulfilling his potential. In reality, Cliffie is a parasitic failure who has moved back into her house and contributes nothing. Her husband has left her. Her diary diverges from reality and then departs from it altogether — becoming not delusion but an act of private creation, a novel within the novel. Highsmith's most feminist work and one of her most devastating.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Hannibal book cover

Hannibal

by Thomas Harris

4.0

Seven years after the events of The Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal Lecter is living freely in Florence under an assumed identity, pursued simultaneously by a vengeful Mason Verger — the only surviving victim — and by Clarice Starling, now an embattled FBI agent.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Perlmann's Silence book cover

Perlmann's Silence

by Pascal Mercier

4.0

Philip Perlmann, a celebrated linguist, arrives at a conference in a Ligurian village to deliver a paper — but has nothing to say. As the deadline approaches, his paralysis deepens into a desperate plan that puts everything at risk.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Sphere book cover

Sphere

by Michael Crichton

4.0

A team of scientists is assembled under the Pacific Ocean to investigate a mysterious spacecraft found on the ocean floor — a spacecraft that pre-dates any known human technology. Inside they find a perfect gold sphere. And then the sphere begins to respond to them, and the real terror begins.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Blunderer book cover

The Blunderer

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

Walter Stackhouse reads in the newspaper about the case of Melchior Kimmel, a bookseller accused of staging his wife's death as a bus accident. Walter, trapped in his own unhappy marriage, becomes obsessed with Kimmel's method. When his wife subsequently dies in similar circumstances, Kimmel turns the tables — he begins investigating Walter with the intensity of someone who recognises a mirror image.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Fury book cover

The Fury

by Alex Michaelides

4.0

A group of friends gather on a private Greek island for a holiday with a faded Hollywood actress. Within days, one of them will be dead — and the narrator, playwright Elliot Chase, must reconstruct what happened before the killer strikes again.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Glass Cell book cover

The Glass Cell

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

Philip Carter serves six years in an American federal prison for a crime he didn't commit — a financial conspiracy his employer framed him for. He comes out changed: harder, drug-dependent, capable of violence in ways he wasn't before. A novel about what prison does to a person and what happens when that person returns to a life that has changed without him.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Tremor of Forgery book cover

The Tremor of Forgery

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

Howard Ingham, an American writer, has come to Tunisia to work on a screenplay. His fiancée doesn't arrive. A colleague dies ambiguously. One night Ingham may have killed an intruder with a typewriter. He isn't certain. Set almost entirely in Hammamet, Tunisia, this is Highsmith's most existential novel — the question of whether Ingham committed a crime becomes less important than the question of whether it matters to him that he might have.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Two Faces of January book cover

The Two Faces of January

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

Athens, 1960s. Rydal Keener, a young American drifting through Greece on his father's money, encounters Chester MacFarland — a small-time con man on the run with his wife Colette. When Chester accidentally kills a man and Rydal witnesses it, the two become fatally linked. A thriller set across Greek landscapes — Athens, Crete, Istanbul — exploring the father-son dynamic between two men who are drawn to each other and threatening to each other.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Witch Elm book cover

The Witch Elm

by Tana French

4.0

Toby, charming and fortunate, wakes up in his cousin's home after a violent attack that has left him changed. When a skull is found in the wych elm in the garden, Toby becomes entangled in a decades-old death — and begins to question everything he believed about himself and his family.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
This Sweet Sickness book cover

This Sweet Sickness

by Patricia Highsmith

4.0

David Kelsey maintains a double life: during the week he lives in a boarding house and works as a chemist; on weekends he retreats to a house he has secretly bought and furnished for a woman named Annabelle — who doesn't love him and has married someone else. A study in erotic obsession so complete that the obsessive has replaced reality with a private fiction. One of Highsmith's most psychologically acute portraits of a particular masculine pathology.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Briefing for a Descent into Hell book cover
3.9

A middle-aged professor is found wandering and amnesiac. As psychiatrists attempt to restore his 'normal' mind, the reader experiences the world he inhabits—visions of a cosmic mission, a tropical island, the war between light and dark. Lessing's most experimental novel, a challenge to the very concept of normality.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
One Perfect Couple book cover

One Perfect Couple

by Ruth Ware

3.9

Five couples maroon themselves on a remote island to film a reality dating show — then a storm cuts them off, the crew vanishes, and the bodies start to pile up. Ruth Ware delivers a sun-soaked, survival-horror riff on the locked-room thriller, with a nod to Agatha Christie.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)

Disclosure: Amazon links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Skip to main content