Saturday, April 21, 2018

Fiction Thriller Books You Won't Want To Put Down

By Donald Sanders


When a story is told in the first-person point of view, the narrative can sometimes be limited to what that one individual character is thinking, feeling, or experiencing. The Girl on the Train is a book that avoids that problem by delegating the narrator role between three different characters. The fast pace and exciting storyline are what makes this one of the top-selling fiction thriller books.

It would be hard to find a person who read Gone Girl and didn't feel compelled to get all the way to the end to see what happens. This is a novel that uses an unreliable narrator to add to the element of suspense. Although it may not be a happy, feel-good tale, there is something satisfying about reading Gone Girl.

For those who love whodunit stories but want to see the genre in a more contemporary style and setting, Into the Water is a great book to pick up. The plot is centered around a river in which many local women have drowned. The storyline has enough twists and turns in it to keep the reader curious, engaged, and ultimately satisfied with the way things turn out.

The adventure of Robert Langdon continues in Origin by Dan Brown. This is filled with Brown's signature styles, and all of the elements his readers have come to expect in one of his books such as cryptology, symbology, and mind-blowing conspiracies. People who love the other stories in this series ought to give this one a try.

Many people have heard of the Da Vinci Code because of the popular movie starring Tom Hanks, and it is by far one of Dan Brown's most popular novels. The main characters are a symbologist (Robert Langdon, a character who was able to sustain an entire five-book series) and a cryptologist. A series of ancient religious mysteries put these two right at the center of a literal battle of beliefs from which the only escape is to dig even deeper into the conspiracies.

It is always amazing when an author's first book is a huge international success, and that was exactly the case with SJ Watson's Before I Go to Sleep. This book has been translated into numerous languages and has seen popularity in many different countries. The main character is especially vulnerable because she suffers from a form of amnesia that prevents her from forming new memories.

People love The Lying Game by Sara Shepard because it showcases some of the deceit of real life, as well as some of the hazards of pulling pranks that can take very ugly and even deadly turns. The story starts with the protagonist finding a video of what appears to be herself posted online, and this perpetuates her discovery of a deadly game. People who like this story can read more about it in the novels that follow in the series.

Out of Australia, Jane Harper is an author who has crafted a book that is mysterious and engaging in her very first work in this genre. The book is called The Dry, and it takes place in an Australian farming town of Harper's own invention. The plot is focused on the big secrets and conspiracies hidden in this seemingly innocent small town, as uncovered by a federal agent who has returned to his hometown for the funeral of a friend.




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