DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

The Best Thrillers of the Year (So Far)

June 4, 2025
in News
The Best Thrillers of the Year (So Far)
505
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

I want an ambitious big-city thriller about murder, lust and wealth

The Doorman

by Chris Pavone

Chicky Diaz has been a doorman at a fancy Manhattan apartment building for nearly three decades, and in the course of a single, terrifying day will learn that he can’t protect it from the city’s chaos. Meanwhile, the building’s millionaires and billionaires, who feel keenly the disparities in their circumstances, face a host of troubles, many of their own making. While a mystery hums beneath the narrative — it’s clear from the start that someone won’t make it out alive — “The Doorman” is better read as a state-of-the-city novel about contemporary New York, a kaleidoscopic portrait of the city at a singularly unsettled time. Read our review.


I want to read a thriller about something incredibly specific

The Impossible Thing

by Belinda Bauer

Who wants to read a novel about the trade in rare birds’ eggs that thrived in England in the first half of the 20th century but is now illegal? Not me — or at least I didn’t until I read this suspenseful, charming mystery. It begins in Yorkshire in 1926, when young Celie Sheppard daringly plucks a blazing red guillemot egg — coveted by collectors — from the side of a cliff, and takes us through the astonishing history of the egg and the people willing to lie, steal and even kill for it. Read our review.


Give me a smart serial-killer thriller

The Man Made of Smoke

by Alex North

Dan Garvie, a criminal profiler in England — long haunted by his childhood near-encounter with an infamous serial killer known as the Pied Piper — finds himself drawn back into the case after the suspicious death of his father, a police officer. Following clues his father left behind, he soon realizes that there’s a new killer on the loose, targeting people connected to the Pied Piper murders. The plot is beautifully executed, and it’s quite satisfying to watch the three narrative threads of the story — Dan’s, his father’s and that of a young boy named James — come together. Read our review.


I’d like a mesmerizing thriller by an international literary star

Your Steps on the Stairs

by Antonio Muñoz Molina; translated by Curtis Bauer

In this anxious, unconventional thriller by a literary superstar in Spain, an unnamed man, recently relocated to Lisbon from New York, is waiting for his beloved wife to join him in their new apartment. The earth is getting hotter everywhere, and the narrator sees his new home as a refuge, physically as well as emotionally. “If the world is going to come to an end, there’s no better place to wait for it to end than here,” he says. Reading this book feels like hearing a constant alarm ringing in a neighbor’s house. You’ll want to read the ending more than once. Read our review.


I want to read an old-fashioned locked-room mystery

Fair Play

by Louise Hegarty

A group of friends convenes for an overnight murder mystery party in an Irish country house on New Year’s Eve, but the next morning one of them is dead for real. “Fair Play” is a witty, knowing homage to classic 1920s detective fiction, but it’s also a deeply sensitive examination of the loneliness and confusion of grief — and an affecting reminder that every sudden death is a mystery that can’t be fully explained. Read our review.

I’d like a brainy thriller that will keep me guessing

Dissolution

by Nicholas Binge

This chronology-hopping work of speculative fiction about time, memory and scientists run amok is suspenseful, provocative and surprisingly tender. It begins with an interrogation in what appears to be an empty swimming pool, as a man named Hassan forces an elderly woman, Maggie Webb, to delve into her husband’s past memories in order to unearth a critical piece of information. “The fate of all our lives” depends on it, he says. Read our review.


How about a thriller filled with jaw-dropping twists and turns?

Dead Money

by Jakob Kerr

Days before someone shoots him to death, Trevor Canon, the founder of a multibillion-dollar San Francisco “mobility platform,” amends his will to freeze his assets in the event of his murder. That’s the proximate story of this terrific debut, which appears to be a traditional whodunit but is really an unpredictable nesting-box of surprises. Kerr, who worked at Airbnb for a decade, brings an insider’s knowledge and a satirist’s sensibility to the vanities and delusions of Silicon Valley’s entrepreneurs, tech bros and megalomaniacal chief executives. Read our review.

Give me a thriller with characters I won’t soon forget

The Last Illusion of Paige White

by Vanessa McCausland

Jane Masters, a journalist, left her small Australian hometown in Australia to make a new life in Sydney. But when an old frenemy-turned-social-media-influencer from her school days, Paige, dies by drowning after posting a disturbing and enigmatic photo of herself on Instagram, Jane finds herself embroiled in a mystery that demands an excavation of the past. It may sound like a familiar thriller plot, but McCausland elevates it with thoughtful, subtle writing and a clever plot. What makes the novel infinitely more poignant are the chapters narrated by Paige, suffused with regret for her life’s mistakes. Read our review.

Sarah Lyall is a writer at large for The Times, writing news, features and analysis across a wide range of sections.

The post The Best Thrillers of the Year (So Far) appeared first on New York Times.

Share202Tweet126Share
Japan coalition to back Takaichi as first woman PM — reports
News

Japan coalition to back Takaichi as first woman PM — reports

by Deutsche Welle
October 19, 2025

ruling party and main opposition have agreed to form an alliance, paving the way for to become the Asian nation’s ...

Read more
Asia

Australia bowls first in ODI against India led by new captain Shubman Gill

October 19, 2025
News

No. 6 Alabama stifles No. 11 Tennessee 37-20 for its 4th straight win over a ranked team

October 19, 2025
News

‘We never lost faith’: Culver City palatero reunites with family after 114 days detained

October 18, 2025
Football

Turnovers haunt USC during costly rain-soaked loss at Notre Dame

October 18, 2025
Gran-Tifa: Boomer Resistance Activists Out in Large Numbers at ‘No Kings’ Rally

Gran-Tifa: Boomer Resistance Activists Out in Large Numbers at ‘No Kings’ Rally

October 18, 2025
‘King’ Trump, 79, Takes Dump on Protestors in Bonkers AI Video

‘King’ Trump, 79, Takes Dump on Protestors in Bonkers AI Video

October 18, 2025
China’s ruling Communist Party meets to map out plans for the next 5 years

China’s ruling Communist Party meets to map out plans for the next 5 years

October 18, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.