Mystery/Thriller · Psychological Thriller · Unreliable Narrator · Family Secrets

5 hand-picked mystery/thriller, psychological thriller, unreliable narrator, and family secrets books curated by NextBookAfter.

Mystery/ThrillerPsychological ThrillerUnreliable NarratorFamily Secrets
Cover of A Flicker in the Dark

A Flicker in the Dark

Thick as Thieves hooked you with danger rooted in decades-old crimes and romance that crackled through every shared glance. A Flicker in the Dark delivers that same loaded-gun tension—a heroine haunted by her serial killer father, now facing horrors that feel like history repeating. The suspense grips hard, the chemistry shifts from wary to vulnerable, and the pace refuses to let you sleep.

Cover of Home Before Dark

Home Before Dark

If The Turn of the Key's corrosive unreliable narrator and smart-home paranoia kept you spiraling, you need a haunted house story where the memoir itself is the trap. Home Before Dark trades surveillance cameras for family secrets that validate every cynical suspicion you've ever had about picture-perfect privilege—and the protagonist's ambition makes her the perfect victim of her own legacy.

Cover of The Breakdown

The Breakdown

If you devoured the paranoid spiral and unreliable narrator in Beast In View, you need the same relentless mental unraveling in your next read. The Breakdown plunges into a protagonist's disintegrating grip on reality, where isolation breeds monstrous doubt and repressed fury explodes beneath suburban normalcy—psychological suspense that dissects instability with devastating intellect.

Cover of The Good Sister

The Good Sister

The Silent Patient hooked you because it made you an accomplice—forcing you to dissect every therapy session, every motive, every buried trauma until that final twist shattered everything you thought you knew. That cerebral thrill of questioning reality, of rewinding timelines to catch what you missed, of watching a psyche unravel through intimacy rather than violence—that's the addiction we're feeding.

Cover of The Turn of the Key

The Turn of the Key

If A Place of Execution left you haunted by Scardale's isolated suspicions and buried traumas, dive into The Turn of the Key for that same chilling blend of unreliable narrators and shocking revelations in a claustrophobic Scottish Highlands setting. Ruth Ware masterfully echoes Val McDermid's gritty feminist undertones, exposing class hierarchies and institutional failures through a tenacious female protagonist unraveling dark family secrets. It's the perfect thriller for dissecting moral ambiguities and rural decay that fans crave.