If you loved Alex Michaelides’ The Silent Patient — that delicious mix of psychological intrigue, gasp-out-loud twists, and characters you can’t stop side-eyeing — this is for you. I’ve rounded up five thrillers that scratch the same itch. Expect flawed narrators, unreliable truths, and plenty of moments where you’ll want to throw the book across the room (in the best way possible).
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Publication Date: January 2, 2018Publisher: William MorrowGenre: Psychological Thriller / Domestic SuspenseGoodreads Rating: Around 3.9/5 from hundreds of thousands of readers
Imagine if Hitchcock’s Rear Window moved into a cozy but claustrophobic New York brownstone… and the lead was a woman who hasn’t stepped outside in months. Dr. Anna Fox spends her days sipping wine (okay, more like gulping), watching classic films, and peering out the window at her neighbors. When she sees something she shouldn’t, her whole world tilts — but is it real, or the wine, or her meds, or something darker entirely?
This book oozes atmosphere. You feel the walls closing in. You feel the uneasy quiet of her empty house. You feel the tension in every side-eye she gives her neighbors.
That “I can’t trust what I’m reading” feeling from page one.
Tightly coiled suspense that snaps at just the right moments.
Short chapters that keep you saying “just one more” until it’s suddenly 2 a.m.
The first half is slow — it’s less a roller coaster and more a Ferris wheel that suddenly drops.
Anna’s choices will have you yelling at the page (but hey, that’s half the fun).
The twist hits hard and makes you want to reread to spot all the hints you missed.
Some readers find the protagonist so frustrating they struggle to root for her — but if you embrace her flaws, the payoff is better.
Publication Date: April 2011 (UK), June 2011 (US)Publisher: Doubleday / HarperCollinsGenre: Psychological Thriller / SuspenseGoodreads Rating: About 3.9/5
Christine wakes up every day with no memory of who she is. Imagine opening your eyes, seeing a stranger in your bed, and being told he’s your husband… every single morning. The only thread holding her life together is a journal she keeps — and the more she writes, the more she realizes the person she trusts most might be the one lying to her.
This isn’t just a thriller — it’s a nightmare you live on repeat. You feel her panic, her desperation, her disorientation.
The structure cleverly mirrors Christine’s own disjointed reality.
Every time you think you’ve figured it out, the book says, “Oh, sweetie, no.”
An emotional undercurrent that makes the ending hit harder.
The repetitive nature of her memory loss means you’ll see similar scenes more than once — but that repetition builds the tension.
If you want action on every page, the careful pacing might feel slow.
An original premise executed with genuine emotional pull.
The final reveal is shocking — but some readers wish there had been more breadcrumbs earlier on.
Publication Date: 2020 (Norwegian), 2022 (English)Publisher: Aschehoug (original)Genre: Scandinavian Noir / Psychological ThrillerGoodreads Rating: Mid-to-high 3s, with rave critical reviews
This one is for when you want your thrillers colder, darker, and… stranger. We’re talking multiple narrators — a troubled student, a mother, a detective, and, yes, a Burmese python. The story threads around a missing teenager, buried secrets, and the kind of tension only Nordic noir can deliver.
This isn’t a “gulp it down in a night” thriller — it’s the one you savor, letting the layers of atmosphere sink in.
That delicious, slow-burn Scandinavian dread.
Unique point-of-view shifts that keep you unsettled.
A mix of crime investigation and psychological deep dives.
If you want a twist every chapter, this might feel too methodical.
The multiple perspectives require a bit more focus to follow.
Unusual narrative voices and an atmosphere so thick you could bottle it.
The pace is deliberate — which might be a dealbreaker for impatient readers.
Publication Date: 2016Publisher: Sphere (UK) / Berkley (US)Genre: Psychological Thriller / CrimeGoodreads Rating: Around 4.0/5
You’re on your commute. You open the paper. You see your own photo in a classified ad. You have no idea who took it — or why. And then you find out other women who appeared in the ad have been attacked. This one plays on the fear that you’re always being watched… because maybe you are.
Clever use of everyday settings to create unease.
Dual perspectives — the victim’s growing paranoia and the investigator’s dogged pursuit.
Short, punchy chapters that keep the tension taut.
If you prefer a single, deeply explored protagonist, the split POV might keep you at arm’s length.
Relies on coincidence a bit more than some readers prefer.
Takes something as mundane as a train ride and makes it terrifying.
A couple of reveals lean on convenience — but they still pack a punch.
Publication Date: 2016Publisher: Bantam PressGenre: Psychological Thriller / Domestic NoirGoodreads Rating: Around 3.6/5
Jean’s husband is dead. Everyone thinks they know what he did. She’s stayed silent all these years… but silence is its own kind of story. Through shifting timelines and perspectives, we learn what really happened — and why Jean has kept her mouth shut.
A morally complex narrator who isn’t simply “good” or “bad.”
The way the truth comes out in drips, keeping you hooked.
Richly drawn supporting characters who feel just as suspicious as the leads.
A slow start before the pieces begin to fall into place.
If you need fireworks in the first chapter, this is more of a simmer.
Perfect for fans of character-driven mysteries where the “why” is as important as the “who.”
Some readers expect a more dramatic final reveal than they get — this one is about the journey.