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The Girl on the Train: A Novel Kindle Edition

4.1 out of 5 stars 494,502 ratings

The #1 New York Times bestseller, USA Today Book of the Year and now a major motion picture starring Emily Blunt.
 
Rachel takes the same commuter train every morning and night. Every day she rattles down the track, flashes past a stretch of cozy suburban homes and stops at the signal that allows her to daily watch the same couple having breakfast on their deck. She's even started to feel like she knows them. Jess and Jason, she calls them. Their life—as she sees it—is perfect. Not unlike the life she recently lost.

And then she sees something shocking. It's only a minute until the train moves on, but it's enough. Now everything's changed. Unable to keep it to herself, Rachel goes to the police. But is she really as unreliable as they say? Soon she is deeply entangled not only in the investigation but in the lives of everyone involved. Has she done more harm than good?
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

An Amazon Best Book of the Month, January 2015: Intersecting, overlapping, not-quite-what-they-seem lives. Jealousies and betrayals and wounded hearts. A haunting unease that clutches and won’t let go. All this and more helps propel Paula Hawkins’s addictive debut into a new stratum of the psychological thriller genre. At times, I couldn’t help but think: Hitchcockian. From the opening line, the reader knows what they’re in for: “She’s buried beneath a silver birch tree, down towards the old train tracks…” But Hawkins teases out the mystery with a veteran’s finesse. The “girl on the train” is Rachel, who commutes into London and back each day, rolling past the backyard of a happy-looking couple she names Jess and Jason. Then one day Rachel sees “Jess” kissing another man. The day after that, Jess goes missing. The story is told from three character’s not-to-be-trusted perspectives: Rachel, who mourns the loss of her former life with the help of canned gin and tonics; Megan (aka Jess); and Anna, Rachel’s ex-husband’s wife, who happens to be Jess/Megan’s neighbor. Rachel’s voyeuristic yearning for the seemingly idyllic life of Jess and Jason lures her closer and closer to the investigation into Jess/Megan’s disappearance, and closer to a deeper understanding of who she really is. And who she isn’t. This is a book to be devoured. -Neal Thompson

Review

The Girl on the Train has more fun with unreliable narration than any chiller since Gone Girl. . . . The Girl on the Train is liable to draw a large, bedazzled readership too. . . . The Girl on the Train is full of back-stabbing, none of it literal.”—Janet Maslin, The New York Times

The Girl on the Train marries movie noir with novelistic trickery. . . hang on tight. You'll be surprised by what horrors lurk around the bend.”—USA Today

“Like its train, the story blasts through the stagnation of these lives in suburban London and the reader cannot help but turn pages. . . . The welcome echoes of
Rear Window throughout the story and its propulsive narrative make The Girl on the Train an absorbing read.”—The Boston Globe

“[
The Girl on the Train] pulls off a thriller's toughest trick: carefully assembling everything we think we know, until it reveals the one thing we didn't see coming."—Entertainment Weekly

Gone Girl fans will devour this psychological thriller. . . . Hawkins’s debut ends with a twist that no one—least of all its victims—could have seen coming.”—People

“Given the number of titles that are declared to be 'the next' of a bestseller . . . book fans have every right to be wary. But Paula Hawkins’ novel
The Girl on the Train just might have earned the title of 'the next Gone Girl.”—Christian Science Monitor

“Hawkins’s taut story roars along at the pace of, well, a high-speed train. …Hawkins delivers a smart, searing thriller that offers readers a 360-degree view of lust, love, marriage and divorce.”—
Good Housekeeping

“There’s nothing like a possible murder to take the humdrum out of your daily commute.”—
Cosmopolitan

"Paula Hawkins has come up with an ingenious slant on the currently fashionable amnesia thriller. . . . Hawkins juggles perspectives and timescales with great skill, and considerable suspense builds up along with empathy for an unusual central character."—
The Guardian

“Paula Hawkins deftly imbues her debut psychological thriller with inventive twists and a shocking denouement. … Hawkins delivers an original debut that keeps the exciting momentum of
The Girl on the Train going until the last page.”—Denver Post

The Girl on the Train, Hawkins’s first thriller, is well-written and ingeniously constructed.” The Washington Post

“The novel is at its best in the moment of maximum confusion, when neither the reader nor the narrators know what is occurring” –
The Financial Times

“This fresh take on Hitchcock’s
Rear Window is getting raves and will likely be one of the biggest debuts of the year.”—Omaha World-Herald

“Hawkins’s tale of love, regret, violence and forgetting is an engrossing psychological thriller with plenty of surprises. . . . The novel gets harder and harder to put down as the story screeches toward its unexpected ending.”—
Minneapolis Star Tribune

“A gripping, down-the-rabbit-hole thriller.”—
Entertainment Weekly Hotlist

“The Thriller So Engrossing, You'll Pray for Snow: Send in the blizzards, because nothing as mundane as work, school or walking the dog should distract you from this debut thriller. A natural fit for fans of Gone Girl-style unreliable narrators and twisty, fast-moving plots,
The Girl on the Train will have you racing through the pages."—Oprah.com

“It's difficult to say too much more about the plot of
The Girl on the Train; like all thrillers, it's best for readers to dive in spoiler-free. This is a debut novel—Hawkins is a journalist by training—but it doesn't read like the work of someone new to suspense. The novel is perfectly paced, from its arresting beginning to its twist ending; it's not an easy book to put down. . . . . What really makes The Girl on the Train such a gripping novel is Hawkins' remarkable understanding of the limits of human knowledge, and the degree to which memory and imagination can become confused.”—NPR.org

“[L]ike
Gone Girl, Hawkins's book is a highly addictive novel about a lonely divorcee who gets caught up in the disappearance of a woman whom she had been surreptitiously watching. And beyond the Gone Girl comparisons, this book has legs of its own.”—GQ.com

“Paula Hawkins’ thriller is a shocking ride.”
–US Weekly
“An ex-wife indulges her voyeuristic tendencies in Paula Hawkins’s film-ready
The Girl on the Train. In the post-Gone Girl era, crimes of love aren’t determined by body counts or broken hearts, but by who controls the story line.” –Vogue

The Girl on the Train [is] a harrowing new suspense novel…a complex and thoroughly chilling psychological thriller… The Girl on the Train is one of those books where you can’t wait — yet almost can’t bear — to turn the page. It’s a stunning novel of dread.”New York Daily News

The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins is a psychologically gripping debut that delivers.” –The Missourian

The Girl on the Train is the kind of slippery, thrilling read that only comes around every few years (see Gone Girl).” –BookPage

“Hawkins, a former journalist, is a witty, sharp writer with a gift for creating complex female characters.” –
Cleveland Plain Dealer

The Girl on the Train is as tautly constructed as Gone Girl or A.S.A. Harrison's The Silent Wife, and has something more: a main character who is all screwed up but sympathetic nonetheless. Broken, but dear. . . . No matter how well it's written, a suspense novel can fall apart in the last pages, with an overly contrived or unbelievable ending. Here, The Girl on the Train shines, with its mystery resolved by a left-field plot twist that works, followed, surprisingly, by what you might call a happy ending.”—Newsday

“I’m calling it now:
The Girl on the Train is the next Gone Girl. Paula Hawkins’s highly anticipated debut novel is a dark, gripping thriller with the shocking ending you crave in a noir-ish mystery.” –Bustle


“Rachel takes the same train into London every day, daydreaming about the lives of the occupants in the homes she passes. But when she sees something unsettling from her window one morning, it sets in motion a chilling series of events that make her question whom she can really trust.”—
Woman’s Day

“Hawkins’s debut novel is a tangle of unreliable narrators, but what will have readers talking is her deft handling of twists and turns and her eerily fine-tuned narrative. This is one creepy, dark thriller. . . . The book is smartly paced and delightfully complex. Just when it seems Hawkins is leading us one way, Rachel, Anna, or Megan change the game. Nothing can be taken for granted in
The Girl on the Train, not even the account of the girl herself.”—Las Vegas Weekly

"Psychologically astute debut . . . The surprise-packed narratives hurtle toward a stunning climax, horrifying as a train wreck and just as riveting."—
Publishers Weekly (starred review)


“[A] chilling, assured debut. . . . Even the most astute readers will be in for a shock as Hawkins slowly unspools the facts, exposing the harsh realities of love and obsession's inescapable links to violence.”—
Kirkus (starred review)

“intricate, multilayered psychological suspense debut, from a staggered timeline and three distinct female narrators. Rachel, who is unabashed in her darker instincts, anchors the narrative. Readers will fear, pity, sympathize and root for her, though she's not always understandable or trustworthy. . . . En route to a terrorizing and twisted conclusion, all three women—and the men with whom they share their lives—are forced to dismantle their delusions about others and themselves, their choices and their respective relationships.”—
Shelf Awareness

"This month we're gearing up for Paula Hawkins's mystery
The Girl on the Train. Its three narrators keep readers guessing as they try to suss out who's behind one character's shocking disappearance. Can you figure out who did it before they do?"—Martha Stewart Living

“What a thriller!”—
People Style Watch

“Hawkins keeps the tension ratcheted high in this thoroughly engrossing tale of intersecting strangers and intimate betrayals. Kept me guessing until the very end.”—Lisa Gardner, #1
New York Times–bestselling author of the Detective D. D. Warren series

“I simply could not put it down.”—Tess Gerritsen,
New York Times–bestselling author of the Rizzoli and Isles series

“Gripping, enthralling—a top-notch thriller and a compulsive read.”—S. J. Watson,
New York Times–bestselling author of Before I Go to Sleep

“Be ready to be spellbound, ready to become as obsessed. . . .
The Girl on the Train is the kind of book you’ll want to press into the hands of everyone you know, just so they can share your obsession and you can relive it.”—Laura Kasischke, author of The Raising

“What a group of characters, what a situation, what a book! It’s Alfred Hitchcock for a new generation and a new era.”—Terry Hayes, author of
I Am Pilgrim

“Artfully crafted and utterly riveting.
The Girl on the Train’s clever structure and expert pacing will keep you perched on the edge of your seat, but it’s Hawkins’s deft, empathetic characterization that will leave you pondering this harrowing, thought-provoking story about the power of memory and the danger of envy.”—Kimberly McCreight, New York Times–bestselling author of Reconstructing Amelia

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00L9B7IKE
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Riverhead Books
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 13, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2.5 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 326 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780698185395
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0698185395
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ HL760L
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 18 years and up
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 out of 5 stars 494,502 ratings

About the author

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Paula Hawkins
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PAULA HAWKINS worked as a journalist for fifteen years before writing her first novel. Born and brought up in Zimbabwe, Paula moved to London in 1989. Her first thriller, The Girl on the Train, has sold more than 23 million copies worldwide. Published in over fifty languages, it has been a Number 1 bestseller around the world and was a box office hit film starring Emily Blunt.

Paula's thrillers, Into the Water and A Slow Fire Burning, were also instant Number 1 bestsellers.

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
494,502 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this novel engaging, describing it as a page-turner with countless twists and turns that keep them hooked throughout. The writing is well-paced and easy to read, making it difficult to put down. While the characters are rich and nuanced, some customers find them unlikeable, and the beginning of the book is slow-paced and depressing.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

24,672 customers mention "Suspenseful"20,992 positive3,680 negative

Customers find the book suspenseful, with its compelling psychological thriller elements and numerous twists and turns that keep them engaged throughout.

"...aftermath of loss, with their own pathologies and pathos, shines as a hypnotic and nimble new comer in a genre burdened down with rigid rehashing of..." Read more

"...It's a great first novel. That is, the story. The story is very creative and her telling of it, writing excluded, is engaging and makes you not wish..." Read more

"...Other important topics discussed in this book are mental illness, the role of women in society, whether you can really know someone, and when, if..." Read more

"...From there the novel unfolds as a mystery/thriller, not unlike Gillian Flynn’s “Gone Girl,” as Rachel becomes involved with the lives of those whose..." Read more

23,582 customers mention "Readability"23,295 positive287 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a great first novel with an engaging edginess and satisfying literary quality.

"...The characterizations are spot on...." Read more

"...It's a great first novel and I sincerely hope that Ms. Hawkins won't feel overwhelmed and cursed by it...." Read more

"...I found it to be a good read. Rating: 5 Stars. Joseph J. Truncale (Author: Martial art and Warrior Haiku and Senryu)" Read more

"...I think this is a great novel for those of you who are not big readers, or perhaps you are transitioning from young adult to adult books...." Read more

9,867 customers mention "Writing quality"7,534 positive2,333 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting it is well-paced and easy to read, with one customer highlighting its superb prose.

"...The selected sentences in this book were truly great quotes on what is a grueling battle, for some of us, to get through life...." Read more

"...While the pacing is generally very quick, I did feel a bit bored during the middle of the book, when I felt like the action slowed down a bit...." Read more

"...The books deserves 4.5 stars for story, characters, and writing, but the ending, with its unrealistic confession, was such a letdown and so poorly..." Read more

"...Does that mean it wasn’t well-written and well put together? No...." Read more

2,421 customers mention "Page turner"2,370 positive51 negative

Customers describe this book as a definite page-turner that keeps them flipping through the pages from beginning to end.

"...It’s definitely a page-turner, but it has a slow start. If you enjoy this genre, then I definitely recommend this book...." Read more

"...Any book, to me, that keeps me turning the pages and ignoring my work, my kitchen, and my dirty laundry for two straight days because I can’t put it..." Read more

"...If you want a real page turner and "whodunit" to read, put this one on your list." Read more

"...It was a compelling story and had aspects of a thriller which made it a page turner...." Read more

1,340 customers mention "Difficulty to put down"1,073 positive267 negative

Customers find the book very difficult to put down and not difficult to follow.

"...It's easy to read, easy to follow and there is no confusion, but hearing myself explain it, it did sound complicated...." Read more

"...It’s actually a perfect commuter read. Engaging but not too challenging – ideal for the girl (or boy) on the train." Read more

"...If I had the time, I would have read it all in one day. It's not hard. It's an easy, gripping read. That's why I'm giving it 4 stars...." Read more

"...While the level of difficulty was quite easy, emotionally this book takes you for a ride...." Read more

7,373 customers mention "Character development"4,207 positive3,166 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with some finding them rich and nuanced, while others note the lack of a sympathetic protagonist.

"...I admit to finding the alcoholic woman Rachel an interesting character. Her pretending to go to work every day riding the train became intriguing...." Read more

"...The imagery was strong but the characters seemed a little light; but that is what you come to expect from a thriller...." Read more

"...She is a flawed but realistic character, one that I’ve identified more with than maybe any in any book I’ve read in a long time...." Read more

"...train, is an alcoholic who has blackouts, which makes her a very unreliable narrator...." Read more

4,891 customers mention "Value for money"760 positive4,131 negative

Customers find the book's value for money negative, describing it as depressing, boring, and unlikable, with one customer noting that the chapters were almost meaningless to read.

"...Yes, many of the characters in this book do horrible and deplorable things, but I see most of them as having redeemable qualities as well...." Read more

"...is waking up in her bed, naked, bloodied, and hungover, no memories from the night before...." Read more

"...Her chapters were almost meaningless to read, and she was very boring. The men in the book were terrible too!..." Read more

"...Then, the ending came and it was lackluster...." Read more

3,438 customers mention "Pacing"783 positive2,655 negative

Customers find the pacing of the book slow, particularly at the beginning.

"...bit bored during the middle of the book, when I felt like the action slowed down a bit. This is especially true, for me, in hindsight...." Read more

"...The men in the story are a puzzle. There’s good and bad. It’s a confusing mess and I wasn’t always sure which man I was reading about through these..." Read more

"...It’s definitely a page-turner, but it has a slow start. If you enjoy this genre, then I definitely recommend this book...." Read more

"...How emotive, cerebral and delicate this thriller truly is...." Read more

Page turner!
5 out of 5 stars
Page turner!
We love an unreliable narrator and a Gone Gorl-type thriller. 10/10 would recommend
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2015
    Paula Hawkins melancholy tell of what happens to the survivor’s of murder victims as they go on living in the aftermath of loss, with their own pathologies and pathos, shines as a hypnotic and nimble new comer in a genre burdened down with rigid rehashing of the procedural tropes in many mystery thrillers.

    The story starts with Rachel piecing her life back together after being fired from her job. She is living with her flat mate Cathy, pretending to still be employed by riding the train into town each day, and generally snooping in the lives of her neighbors, imagining their specifics and superimposing her wishes on couples in her local park.

    She’s a lonely, self-loathing alcoholic, approaching the hill’s bend who may or may not have murdered a familiar woman in a blackout fit of rage. She keeps reaching into the missing spaces in her memories for those lost hours in hopes of discovering just what happened to the pretty blonde reported by the local press as missing.

    Along the way Rachel makes more than her fair share of missteps like attracting police attention toward her as a potential suspect when she really meant to aid the investigation, to identifying the wrong man as the murderer, causing his life undue pain, and even becoming friends with the victim’s husband, which blows up in her face when he confronts her about her lies.

    The characterizations are spot on. Thirty-somethings, self-involved and reflecting on their experiences to find meaning in their identities and daily lives. Enter Rachel the character with the story’s biggest narrative perspective, filled with angst and despairing after being fired for an alcohol fueled emotional breakdown at work. She looks for meaning in the lives of others and hopes to find someone to love her chubby body and crows feet ridden face.

    Meagan, the hot blond that everyman wants and every woman wants to be, is in similar shape. Her beauty is better, but her loneliness and longing are equally as strong as Rachel’s. The beautiful thing about Hawkins writing is she portrays these ladies desperate situations with striking visceral-ness. Their thoughts, feelings and perspective lunge from the page and right into your mind as the pieces of a real experience, though virtually distributed through the medium of the novel. In short these ladies breathe and live on and off the page.

    I would find myself feeling like, “Poor pretty Meagan—so sad.” not knowing that I’d feel less connection to her after I learned what she’d done to motivate her potential murderer.

    The roles were reversed for Rachel the books protagonist. I thought her quite unappealing at first when I thought she was a depressed and aging alcoholic. But when I discovered that she had several psychological pathologies, I loved her the way I love traffic pile-ups across the median.

    Memories and how they fade over time is the biggest thematic concept discussed in the pages of The Girl On The Train. From Rachel’s pure blackout, to Meagan’s more nuanced memories of darker days locked within the vault of her lonely feelings we get a cobbled together view of the past life events that motivate the characters’ current actions.

    Rachel’s cognition issues come from her drunken blackouts that leave holes in her memories. Meagan and Scott, her husband are both driven by faulty memories, either romanticized through distance from the events that inspired them, or due to constant rehearsal that glosses over the truest features from the past, respectively.

    Loss and how we as people deal with it plays huge in the themes category as well. Rachel as the barren mother turned alcoholic tries to fill the void in her life by helping Scott find his missing piece—just who murdered his wife. But she had in turn lost her dream of being a mother when it was discovered her womb was barren. Scott lost his wife Meagan to the hands of an illusive murderer. Meagan, before dying had lost her way in life due to the deaths of two key people from her past and her resulting disillusionment that sees her seeking to fill that void by cheating on her husband to prove to herself that she is desirable/lovable to men.

    Rachel’s pathological lying and constant meddling are attributes I loath to see in people I know, but on a character as nuanced and just plain crazy as Rachel, they are the life and breath of this narrative, which plays in the—what-about-the-people-who-knew-the-victim, realm.

    And that is the fresh air that Hawkins brings to the genre. Every detective mystery I’ve read or even watched in movie theaters shows the detective’s perspective, or the victims—you know through flash backs. This one discusses what happens to those waiting to hear that the police have captured the slayer of their wife, neighbor, or the girl the protagonist obsessed over as they road the train to town.

    Rachel, as an OCD nightmare stalker/private investigator sizzles as an unexpected suspense novel star who is an unreliable narrator and gets as close as law enforcement would to solving the murder when using their tactics.

    The author mingles a bit of the lead character’s own paranoia and pathological nosiness into her sincere attempts at exposing the murderer—thereby exonerating herself from the memory gap she has of the night in question. How emotive, cerebral and delicate this thriller truly is.
    From wondering if Rachel is the blackout killer, to the red herring of Dr. Adbic as the wanted murder, and then back to wondering if Rachel has actually killed Meagan again, I totally bought the slight of hand that author, Hawkins does right before my very eyes.

    A novelist as skilled at misdirection as she, would definitely make a great up-close street magician. And that’s what the first half of this novel plays out as. A card trick of a tome that kept me wondering who-done-it, while all road lead to the sketchy protagonist in the genre specific trope of the detective did it, but doesn’t remember—this time the detective is a blackout drunk with self esteem issues and a histrionics complex to boot.

    Read this dazzling New York Times Best Seller and recommend it to all your friends.
    11 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2015
    Girl on the Train for writers: a study in suspense and stereotype
    (I reveal a few plot details but no major spoilers)

    The book became a bestseller days after publication. It forces fingers to keep turning pages and swiping screens. It has an early Dreamworks option. How did Hawkins do it?

    As you'd expect, part of the novel's success is simply the expert use of a few well chosen literary devices: an immediate hook that withholds key details, an unreliable narrator, well-timed alternating points of view. What you wouldn't expect is that the character set, as generally one dimensional as it is, could contribute to the mystery as much as it does.

    Aren't typecast characters bad? Not in this case. To understand why, we have to start with Hawkins' excellent hook.

    "She's buried beneath a silver birch tree, down towards the old train tracks, her grave marked with a cairn. Not more than a little pile of stones, really. I didn't want to draw attention to her resting place, but I couldn't leave her without remembrance. She'll sleep peacefully there, no one to disturb her, no sounds but birdsong and the rumble of passing trains.

    ...

    One for sorrow, two for joy, three for a girl...Three for a girl. I'm stuck on three. I just can't get any further. My head is thick with sounds, my mouth thick with blood. Three for a girl. I can hear the magpies--they're laughing, mocking me, a raucous cackling. A tiding. Bad tidings. I can see them now, black against the sun. Not the birds, something else. Someone's coming. Someone is speaking to me. Now look. Now look what you made me do."

    The first paragraph is from the p.o.v. of the murderer, the second from the p.o.v of the victim. Many authors would be tempted to wax eloquent in the opening scene, but it's what you don't know that hooks you. You don't know if the murderer is a man or a woman, you don't even know the victim's gender for sure. You want to find out who was murdered, why, and by whom, but you need to know because of these nine words: "Now look. Now look what you made me do."

    How self-centered, how childish, how chilling. What kind of a person would say that to someone they'd just killed? Consider a few lines Hawkins could have used instead to less stunning effect.

    "You got what you deserved, b&^%#" Meh. Just another revenge story.

    "How could you do that to me, Megan?" or "I'm so sorry."
    Slightly better, as several suspects could have said this, but not hair-raising, still clichéd, and reveals the victim when doing so isn't imperative to addicting readers.

    "Oops." Uhhh....

    I kept coming back to that line "Now look what you made me do" for clues to test my theory of the murder, and though I ended up being right, I was never absolutely sure because the novel makes you guess at which of the characters is the most heartless, and here's where the stereotypes start to do some of Hawkins' work for her. Out of a set of stereotypes, which of them do we judge to be the worst and least deserving of empathy?

    Here's the set, three men and three women:

    1. Rachel the narrator, ultimately weak, has lost everything via alcoholism, including her looks and her self-respect.
    2. Anna the usurper, stole Rachel's man and had his baby. Win! She believes she's a sex goddess and priestess in the cult of domesticity at the same time.
    3. Tom the alpha male, Rachel's ex and Anna's husband, left the broken fading woman for the sexy conquistadora.
    4. Megan, the wild and wounded, feels she should be happy with a loving husband and a secure life, but cannot live up to expectations of monogamy and motherhood. Our victim.
    5. Scott, Megan's husband, loving but jealous, is prone to violence in his insecurity.
    6. Kamal, Megan's honey-voiced counselor, the quintessential comforter and defender of women.

    Come back to "Now look what you made me do." Did Megan's husband say it because he was controlling? Did Megan's lover say it, because she was pregnant? Who exactly, by the way, is the Megan's lover, and is he from the past or the present? Did Anna say it, because she's a soulless succubus? For Hawkins, stereotyping, and especially gender stereotyping, was key to keeping all of these motives viable and the reader invested.

    Do we think that in mystery novels, jilted husbands are destined to kill their slutty wives? Do we think that protective saviors are bound to take advantage of the women they save? Do we think that alcoholics are ultimately responsible for all of the misery they inflict on themselves and others, especially if they're women?

    The answer to every question is yes, getting us into trouble as we try to solve the mystery, and working to Hawkins' advantage. Many writers employ this misdirection, but Hawkins' does it convincingly by consistently developing the worst archetypal traits in each of her characters, keeping their motives in tact and their alibis shadowy. In the case of The Girl on the Train, I should have had more faith in Rachel. I happen to be a woman and an alcoholic. It was painful to read myself in this book, which incidentally does a good job of portraying the psychology of alcoholism. And I never questioned Rachel's self-applied guilt, the fact that she obviously did all the embarrassing things people told her she did. That's as close as I'll get to a spoiler.

    The lesson for writers?

    It's hard to combine suspense and literary fiction, simply because the more intimately you get to know the characters as you do in literary fiction, the easier it is to predict them, which ruins a good mystery.

    At the same time, you have to rise above cliché to write an outstanding suspense novel. In Hawkins' case, she both uses it to her advantage and rises above it. To use cliché, she chooses characters that represent moral choice more than they represent people, so that readers can insert whole lifetimes of personal backstory into their judgements of the characters.

    And how does Hawkins rise above it? This is where the unreliable narrator can be a fantastic strategy when executed well. You can know an unreliable narrator well, but only as well as she knows herself. Hello mystery. Beware, as things get more confusing for the unreliable narrator, other details must become clear, every chapter, to encourage the reader and prevent fatigue. (Read whydunits to study how to mete out just the right amount of detail, while keeping readers intrigued. In Cold Blood (Vintage International) is my favorite, The Silent Wife: A Novel is a recent example.)

    Other further reading:

    For an unreliable narrator whose problem is how honest she is with herself, check out After Life (Nancy Pearl's Book Lust Rediscoveries) by Rhian Ellis, with its killer first line "First, I had to get his body into the boat."

    For another unreliable narrator for whom memory is the problem, check out Elizabeth Is Missing, about an elderly woman with dementia.

    For a "blame the woman" example of using preconceived notions in the service of mystery, check out Ingrid Bergman in the movie Gaslight (1944).

    For voyeurs of murder, check out the Hitchcock classic Rear Window
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  • Hbsc Xris
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un thriller complètement atypique et absolument captivant, coup d'essai, coup de maître !
    Reviewed in France on April 24, 2015
    Ce roman policier est complètement atypique :
    Rachel, une jeune femme divorcée, en coloc, à la dérive, alcoolique prend le train tous les jours pour se rendre à son travail. Son train marque l'arrêt tous les matins quelques minutes aux abords de l'arrière du pavillon où elle a vécu autrefois avec son mari. Sur la terrasse d'un autre pavillon tout proche, elle remarque un jeune couple "glamour" qui prend son petit déjeuner les matins. Elle leur invente des noms, Jess et Jason, une histoire romantique et ils comblent le vide abyssal de sa vie. Un matin, déception, Jess est sur la terrasse, embrassant un homme qui n'est pas Jason. Quelques jours plus tard, les journaux révèlent que Jess, dont le vrai nom s'avère être Megan, a disparu de manière inquiétante. Rachel décide de mener l'enquête...... Mais qui s'intéresse aux divagations d'une alcoolique désespérée et incohérente ? Elle détient pourtant dans un coin de sa mémoire la vérité sur cette disparition.
    Bien écrit et captivant de la 1ère à la dernière page, j'ai été fascinée par l'histoire qui sort de tous les classiques du genre.
    Amatrice de policiers anglo-saxons, c'est mon meilleur roman depuis longtemps, je crois que c'est le premier roman de cette ancienne journaliste, un "coup de maître" je suis déjà impatiente de lire le second.
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  • Greg at 2 Book Lovers Reviews
    5.0 out of 5 stars A ride on a crazy train!
    Reviewed in Canada on August 26, 2017
    Whenever there is one of these books, you know the ones, where the movie rights are sold as soon as the book comes off the press, I am two things: intrigued and skeptical. Intrigued - what is it about this book that has captured so many people so quickly? Skeptical – what did the marketing machine do to get this book out to so many people so quickly? Usually I don’t trust the big brotheresque marketing machine that seems to decide what the population is going to like before we even get it.

    With that being said, I like to think that I go into these things with an open mind, and to be honest, I was immediately drawn into Rachel’s story. I loved the back and forth start of the story; I found that it complemented the confused storyline going on within Rachel’s mind. At several points in the story, I found myself asking (just like Rachel) – “Wait, what just happened?” I felt like I was right there with Rachel on that train ride to hell.

    I’ve read quite a bit of complaining about the characters in The Girl on the Train. Personally, I thought that they were created brilliantly. Not one of them likable, hardly a redeemable characteristic amongst them. From the cheating spouses, the raging alcoholic, to the liars and manipulators…I loved to hate them all. Normally, I like to have a connection with a character, but with The Girl on the Train I was in complete shock at the depths of self-important assholery these characters could reach. It was a character train wreck, and I could not look away.

    I dragged my wife to the movie shortly after I read the book (she actually came quite willingly). Did it live up to the book? No. Did it do the book justice? Yes. And my wife loved it! Will I read another book by Paula Hawkins in the future? Absolutely!

    The Girl on the Train truly was a ride on a crazy train.
  • ADITI SAHA
    5.0 out of 5 stars Am I the last on e to read this book?! Anyhow, do not be the last one to read this epic book.
    Reviewed in India on March 30, 2016
    “Let me tell you this: if you meet a loner, no matter what they tell you, it's not because they enjoy solitude. It's because they have tried to blend into the world before, and people continue to disappoint them.”

    ----Jodi Picoult

    Paula Hawkins, the British international best-selling author, has penned a mind-blowing unputdownable debut thriller, The Girl on the Train, which has shook up the whole world with its intensity of thrill, mystery and unpredictable and shocking turn of events. The climax simply nails the whole story. The story revolves around a mid-aged, divorced, loner, alcoholic, jobless woman who is a regular commuter on the morning train and just like every other day she overlooks her window and enjoys the normal human life on the other side of the tracks. Until one day, she sees something that changes her life forever.

    Synopsis:

    EVERYDAY THE SAME

    Rachel catches the same commuter train every morning. She knows it will wait at the same signal each time, overlooking a row of back gardens. She’s even started to feel like she knows the people who live in one of the houses. ‘Jess and Jason’, she calls them. Their life – as she sees it – is perfect. If only Rachel could be that happy.

    UNTIL TODAY

    And then she sees something shocking. It’s only a minute until the train moves on, but it’s enough.

    Now everything’s changed. Now Rachel has a chance to become a part of the lives she’s only watched from afar.

    Now they’ll see; she’s much more than just the girl on the train.

    Rachel, the protagonist, is the regular traveler on the morning train and on her way to the city, she spies and make up fictional stories about the lives on the other side of the tracks. Among them, she has a personal favorite house and is very keen about the lives of that family, she makes up stories and has given name to the people who reside in that house. Jess and Jason, are the happily married couple whom Rachel loves to spy on. Jess is like her alter ego. Jess has everything that Rachel can never have or has forever lost it. Once upon a time Rachel used to live in the same street and had a life like Jess, with a husband named, Tom. But one day, she sees her "Jess" with a different man and that is when Rachel decides to take things into her own hand and little did she knew that her life would become so threatening and challenging from that point. And who can blame her black-outs when she is point drunk!

    Before penning out my review, I would like to give a standing ovation to the author, Paula Hawkins, who as per me is a genius who knows how to play with her readers' mind. Her imagination knows no boundary or creativity or darkness that can engulf the readers with its intensity.

    The writing is A-class, eloquent, articulate and exceptional. The narrative felt like a drug, as the story spills out from Rachel's POV, which is, in short, sad to read about, due to her equally sad and pathetic lonely life, it felt like right from the beginning, Rachel pulled me into this story and kept me arrested to it till the very last page. Her tone is stimulating with gaps and holes due to her uncountable black outs, that kept me guessing and pulling out my hair till the major climax. There are also two other main characters, Megan and Anna, and the chapters shift from Rachel's POV to Anna's to Megan's, and the three women has an equal psychological grip on my mind with their life stories, problems and drama.

    The setting of Northwestern Home Counties in London is impeccable done as the author vividly captures the landscape, the lifestyle, the houses, the trees of suburban London. While reading, I felt like I was easily transported to such a landscape in my mind's eyes. The author even captures the condition inside a jam-packed train compartment and how the people adjust to stand under the steamy and sweaty conditions, and the demeanor of the people those travelling everyday to their work place on a train strikingly.

    The characters are excellent and thoroughly well-developed. The main three characters are depicted with end number of flaws and how their shortcomings become their own enemy. The characters are psychologically challenged and their life is not an ideal one. But the author has impressively captured the realism in their demeanor. All the three women are self-centered and selfish, whereas their boldness knows no limit. All the three characters are so evocative, interesting and sad that it eventually made my heart grow fonder for them.

    I'm not a feminist but still I loved reading this women centric book that depicts the women as the hero of the book, while trying to project a negative image on the male-dominated society.

    PS: Never read this book while travelling on a train , it might come to haunt you!

    The story is so psychologically twisted and so brilliant, that Dreamworks production has own film rights on this book, which is directed by Tate Taylor, featuring Emily Blunt as Rachel, Rebecca Ferguson as Anna, Haley Bennett as Megan, Justin Theroux as Tom, Luke Evans as Scott, Lisa Kudrow and many more. And the film is slated for an autumn release this year.
  • paola gamez
    5.0 out of 5 stars Could not put it down
    Reviewed in Mexico on May 5, 2018
    This is the first book I finished in less than 4 days. It is addictive and you just can't stop reading. I hesitated a bit to buy it, because I read that the amount of characters was confusing, and it is not true at all. Quite an easy and enjoyable reading. I would definitely recommend it to anyone who wants to enjoy an intriguing story.
  • juan ramon
    5.0 out of 5 stars Buen libro de intriga
    Reviewed in Spain on August 18, 2023
    Me ha gustado mucho esta novela,también al leerla en inglés he tenido que estar un poco más atento a los giros pero la recomiendo en castellano tambien

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