The Girl on the Train
by Paula Hawkins is a mystery story told through the eyes of a lonely and
recovering alcoholic, Rachel Watson, as she sees something while waiting on the
train headed into London. She doesn’t know if what she saw was real but she
must find out.
Rachel Watson rides the morning train into London. While the
train stops at a light, she imagines the life of a young couple she calls “Jason”
and “Jess.” She can see their house from her favorite seat. Until one morning she sees “Jess” with another
man. She is hurt that “Jess” would do that to “Jason” and she relives her own jilted
relationship. When “Jess,” whose real name is Megan, goes missing, Rachel feels
she must tell the police what she saw. When she feel the police don’t give her
information any real attention, she feels she must find out on her own. She is soon drawn into a world of lies, affairs and secrets. Will ever overcome her sordid past? Will she ever happen to Megan? Can she
trust her own eyes and memory in the events of Megan’s disappearance?
The story is told in three perspective, offering events in
various points of the timeline. Rachel’s perspective as the current events
while Megan provides the events leading up to her disappearance. I thought the
book started out real slow and I was wondering what did Rachel really see or
was it her alcohol fueled imagination. But the story speeds up quickly and the
events leading to the identity of the person who was responsible for Megan’s
disappearance happens at a dizzying pace. There was a couple times when I had
to stop and go back a couple of pages to make sure I read it correctly. By the
end of the book, I was thoroughly shocked and thrilled at the revelation of the
person’s identity. I love a mystery in which the clues are subtle but when the
dots are connected, they all make sense. I recommend The Girl on the Train as mystery thriller with so many twists, the
final revelation is a shocker!
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