Tag: Unreliable Narrator

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No One Can Know by Kate Alice Marshall

Dive into Kate Alice Marshall's psychological thriller No One Can Know, where three estranged sisters confront long-buried family secrets and traumatic memories in their childhood home. A gripping tale of deception, memory, and the price of loyalty.

The Fury by Alex Michaelides

"The Fury" by Alex Michaelides is a psychological thriller set on a picturesque Greek island, featuring an unreliable narrator, twists, and dramatic revelations.

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie

"The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" stands as one of the most significant and cunningly devious mystery novels ever published. Not so much a straightforward whodunit as a sly magic trick that gleefully exposes the trickster's sleight-of-hand even while we're still falling for their disinformation.

You will never lose interest in these books with unreliable narrator

Books with an unreliable narrator are the most intriguing stories to be read. When the narrator is unreliable and can’t be trusted, we, the...

What is unreliable Narrator ?

Unreliable Narrator is a character who tells the reader a story and whose credibility has been seriously compromised. This may be because the point...

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Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan

An honest, spoiler-free review of Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan. A thirty-nine-year-old single mother strikes a pretend-girlfriend bargain with a Rhode Island heir, and finds something harder to hand back at summer's end.

Phoebe Berman’s Gonna Lose It by Brooke Averick

A spoiler-free, deeply read review of Brooke Averick's debut Phoebe Berman's Gonna Lose It. Honest praise for its sharp anxiety writing, ensemble friend group, and pre-K classroom humor, plus the patches where the pacing falters. Comparable reads included.

The Midnight Train by Matt Haig

Matt Haig's The Midnight Train follows an ageing bookseller on a ghostly steam-engine ride through his own life. A warm, spoiler-free review of the second Midnight World novel, after The Midnight Library.

The Divorce by Freida McFadden

A spoiler-free review of The Divorce by Freida McFadden. Honest take on the unreliable narrator, three-act perspective shift, suburban texture, and where this 2026 thriller stacks up against The Housemaid and Never Lie.

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