Our Take
Paula Hawkins returns with her most atmospheric and literary thriller yet, trading the propulsive pacing of The Girl on the Train for something more deliberate and deeply unsettling. The genius of The Blue Hour lies in its setting—the tidal island of Eris becomes a character itself, its isolation and twice-daily inaccessibility creating claustrophobic tension that builds with quiet menace. Hawkins explores themes of artistic legacy, female rage, and the stories we construct about the past with nuance that elevates this beyond typical thriller territory. Grace is a compelling narrator whose reliability we question even as we're drawn into her perspective, and the novel's structure—moving between past and present, between Vanessa's story and Grace's—reveals its secrets with exquisite control. This is a slower burn than Hawkins's previous work, rewarding patient readers who appreciate atmosphere and psychological complexity over constant plot twists. Fans of Ruth Ware's isolated settings in The Woman in Cabin 10 or Lucy Foley's The Guest List will be captivated, as will readers who loved the gothic mood of Sarah Waters or Daphne du Maurier. The Blue Hour proves Hawkins is more than capable of sophisticated literary suspense that lingers in the mind long after you've turned the final page.




















