It's that time of the year where we reminisce about the best and the worst of the year gone by. This is my year ended list of the year's best thriller reads of the year gone by .(Some of the books in this list released in the previous years, it's just that I managed to read them only in 2024). So, here goes the list of thrillers which really impressed me in 2024.
1) Home before Dark (Riley Sager)- This genre bender mixes elements of mystery, crime and Horror in a Victorian setting. Like most of Riley Sager's previous works, this one is a real page turner. Told in two perspectives ( the past- Ewan Holt's 'House of Horrors ' bookand the present- Maggie's present day), this one builds up intrigue and tension and comes up with a twist that is sure to blow up your perceptions until then. Some of the jump scare moments are also nicely done.So , if you are looking for a page turning mystery with a little bit of horror elements thrown in, pick this one up!
2.The Teacher (Freida Mcfadden)- is an edge-of-the-seat popcorn thriller. Eve Bennett is the Maths teacher at the local high school, Caseham High. She has a beautiful house, a fulfilling career and a super handsome husband, Nathaniel Bennett. All is as it should be. But it’s then Caseham high is rocked by a scandal involving a student teacher affair, with one student, Addie Severson , at it’s centre. The teacher involved in the scandal is disgraced and leaves the school and Addie joins the class tutored by Eve. But Eve’s real problem starts when she realizes that the troubled kid is also assigned to her husband, Nat for teaching English.
Devoid of too many characters , ‘The Teacher’ is a really engaging thriller.
The twists are hard to predict and just as you believe that you have figured out the ending , Frieda pulls the rug out from under your feet with a really surprising plot twist making this one a really addictive thriller.
3) The Final Curtain (Kiego Higashino) -is a highly entertaining read. The typical Higashino style is unmissable in the plotting, twists and the slow unravel of the mystery. Though there are quite a number of characters , this one is primarily the story of Hiromi, a former actress and Director. Her exchanges with Detective Kaga are the high points of this book (this title is also incidentally the last one in Kigashino’s Detective Kaga series).The author’s attention to detail is pretty evident in most of the crucial scenes of the book and though there are multiple story arcs in the third act, the smooth narrative makes sure that there is no unnecessary cluttering playing the spoilsport for the unassuming reader. Japan’s nuclear history also has been deftly woven into the narrative and contributes as an important plot point.
Higashino is a master of suspense.This one is a solid police procedural which blends psychological realism and hitchcockian mystery.
4) Butter (Azako Yuzuki)- Perhaps, the odd one out in this list, Butter is not your conventional pop- corn thriller, but still it finds a place in this list for it's imaginative plotting and it's rich cultural flavour. Gourmet cook Manako Kajii is convicted of the serial murders of rich businessmen who she is said to have seduced through her culinary skills. The case captures the nation's imagination and journalists are queuing up to get an interview of her but she refuses to speak to any of them till the smart Rika Machida writes a letter to her asking for her recipe for beef stew which she can't resist to write. What follows is a strange connection between the two . More of a story about hunger, food and hunger than a thriller, this one is an interesting take on the complexities of human mind and behaviour .
5)Yellow Face ( R.F Kuang)- Yet another unconventional entrant in this list, this one is a satire which reads like a thriller in the backdrop of the publishing industry.Juniper Song(June Hayward), a white author steals and rewrites an unpublished Novel by her deceased Asian- American Author friend , to become a global best selling author.
The biggest strength of Yellow Face is that it manages to hook the reader from srtart to finish. There aren’t many characters in this Novel and the story is largely told from June’s point of view. Still,there is never a dull moment in the narrative. H.Kang offers an insider’s view on the publishing industry and also manages to be a social commentary on racial stereotyping. The anxieties and insecurities of new age authors and the futility of social media discourses are also well etched out. Though the book reads like a thriller , I prefer calling this one a satire- (a ruthless and a savage one at that!) .From June’s attempts at sounding ‘more Asian’( her ‘rechristening’ as Juniper Song) to the altercation scene at the Asian writer’s workshop , the critique is unmissable, but at the same time, not all over the place.
So, this my list of the best thrillers of the year gone by.
-Nikhilesh Menon R
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