The Girl On the Train : Paula Hawkins



Publisher - Doubleday

Genre - Psychological Thriller
Publishing year - 2015
Language - English
Pages - 316

In the words of Dean Koontz, every life is complicated, every mind a kingdom of unmapped mysteries. This quote is appropriate for the characters of the book The Girl on the Train written by Paula Hawkins. The plot twirls around three incredible women Rachel, Megan, and Anna. They all have different lives, but one incident brings them together, the day when one among them goes missing.

Rachel is a jobless, heavy drinker, a savage individual who needs to accommodate her relationship with Tom, her ex. While Tom is hitched to Anna and has a delightful girl Evie. The two of them are stressed as a result of Rachel's careless and untrustworthy conduct. Being a drunkard, she passed out a great deal, and one day she saw something unnerving yet incapable to remember the following day. Attempting to fill the spaces, she interacted with Scott, Megan's significant other.

From here, she makes a snare of untruths that harm her picture altogether; and puts her on the police radar and Anna's. Given Tom's unfaithfulness, Rachel detests Anna and her girl. She lost her psyche at whatever point she saw them together, living cheerfully in their home. At some point, she saw something from the train and chooses to face the individual who breaks her fantasies.

All the while, she became more acquainted with additional about Megan that changed her life. Megan has an upsetting history that kept her conscious around evening time. She can't discuss it with Scott and pick choices. Everybody is attempting to shroud their privileged insights and for the sake of aiding exacerbate things, particularly Rachel. She goes through a great deal in the past without delivering genuine causes. At the point when it begins to return, it hit hard and changed everybody's lives. Even though her drinking didn't profit anybody, she isn't considered to be dependable. With the individual missing, the police begin addressing everybody, driving them to no place, truth be told.

The characters like Tom and Scott are manipulative, harmful, and some of the time demonstrated fiercely. While the female characters are depicted as powerless, defenceless, desirous, and vulnerable. They continually searching for adoration, make penances for family, or jobless. Paula Hawkins' composing style is excellent, and she holds the perusers speculating about the guilty party. I was certain I know the appropriate responses in the book, yet she refuted me by giving me another incredible bend.

A train venture shifted the direction of six individuals' lives until the end of time. The story is drawing in; I didn't reveal to you who disappears because I don't need you to know without perusing the book. Albeit the characters are broken and not affable, so quite possibly a few perusers won't appreciate understanding it. Be that as it may, their excursion and how everything's associated gives another sort of lift, and I need you to feel it. Along these lines, if you haven't read this book, get it. I suggest it.

Book Recommendation: 8.2 / 10

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