Where to Start with Paula Hawkins
Paula Hawkins worked as a financial journalist for fifteen years before writing fiction. Born in Zimbabwe and based in London, she brings a reporter’s eye for detail and a knack for building tension from ordinary situations. Her debut thriller, “The Girl on the Train,” sold over twenty-three million copies worldwide and was adapted into a major film. Hawkins specializes in unreliable narrators and stories where the most dangerous thing is not what happened but what someone thinks they saw.
Start here
The Girl on the Train
Paula Hawkins · 336 pages · 2015 · Easy
Themes: unreliable narrators, memory, obsession, alcoholism, voyeurism
Rachel rides the same commuter train every morning, passing a row of houses near the tracks. She becomes fixated on a couple she can see through their window, imagining their perfect life. Then one morning she sees something that shatters the illusion, and the woman she has been watching disappears.
Why Start Here
“The Girl on the Train” is Hawkins at her sharpest. The novel takes a mundane, almost universal experience, watching strangers from a train, and turns it into the foundation for a taut psychological thriller. Rachel is an alcoholic whose memory is unreliable, which means you can never be sure whether what she saw is real or a projection of her own loneliness and longing.
The three-narrator structure, Rachel, Megan, and Anna, creates a web of competing perspectives where no single voice holds the whole truth. Hawkins parcels out information with discipline, and each narrator’s revelations shift the story in unexpected directions. The result is a mystery that feels genuinely uncertain right up until its conclusion.
What to Expect
A brisk, addictive thriller at 336 pages with short chapters and multiple timelines. The London commuter setting gives the story a grounded, recognizable atmosphere. Hawkins writes in a clean, direct style that keeps the focus on character and suspense. The book rewards careful attention to detail, especially the small contradictions between what different narrators claim happened.