Friday 20 April 2018

The Best Fiction Thriller Books

By Donald Sanders


One way that a first-person narrative is made more interesting is by breaking up the storytelling into different characters' perspectives. Readers are treated to three highly intriguing female protagonists in The Girl on the Train. This is great for anyone who loves fiction thriller books.

Now that there has been a movie made out of it, Gone Girl has attained more popularity. It still holds up as a great novel with many twists and turns that keep you guessing. One of the interesting aspects of the book is that the reader isn't always sure if the narrator is being truthful.

Nothing is better than taking a classic genre like the whodunnit and refashioning it for modern days. That's what is achieved in Into the Water. The story focuses on a series of drownings in a particular river.

Origin is a Dan Brown book that is a part of the famous Robert Langdon series. Readers will not be disappointed with this novel. It has just as much colorful historical details and thrilling plotlines as any of Brown's other great novels.

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.

For many people, nothing would be scarier than not being able to remember the events of the previous day. It would put a person in a very vulnerable position, relying on those around you to help reconstruct previous events. SJ Watson plays out this scenario in Before I Go to Sleep, in which the main character suffers from amnesia and has only her journal to tell her that something is going on that is just not right.

The Lying Game by Sara Shepard is an interesting tale of deceit. When the protagonist gets caught up in a mischievous game gone awry, things get scary. This is the first book in the Lying Game series.

Australian author Jane Harper wrote a book called The Dry, which is about a small farming town where a federal agent believes some kind of conspiracy is happening. The agent has returned to the town, his hometown, for the first time in a decade to attend the funeral of his friend. Harper's rich details make this town seem as real as any other, although it is completely fictional.




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