Thrillers book clubs

Connect with your fellow readers in a thriller book club on Fable. Through Everand, discover suspenseful ebooks and audiobooks that will keep you on the edge of your seat. Then start a thriller book club or join one of our communities reading thrillers of all kinds, including mystery, sci-fi thrillers, romantic suspense, and action-adventure.
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Thrillers author spotlight

Freida McFadden
2238 clubs
Alice Feeney
718 clubs
Rebecca Yarros
664 clubs
Sarah J. Maas profile
Sarah J. Maas
575 clubs
Emily Henry
525 clubs

Awesome thrillers book reviews

Yellowface cover
5.0
909 clubs
𝒀𝒊𝒍𝒅𝒊𝒛𐙚51w ago
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️Yellowface: A Masterclass in How to Ruin Your Life Publicly and Still Think You’re the Main Character Imagine stealing a dead woman’s novel and then somehow thinking you’re the VICTIM. That’s June Hayward. This woman could burn down a house and be like, “It’s the fire’s fault for being flammable.” June Hayward really looked at Athena Liu’s corpse, shrugged, and said: “Finders, keepers, bitch.” And honestly? That was her smartest decision in the entire book. It only gets dumber from there. She gaslit herself so hard she could’ve lit up Times Square. Like: “I didn’t steal! I preserved her work! I’m a hero! Publishing is racist against me!” Ma’am, you robbed a grave and then wrote an essay about how YOU were the oppressed one. You are not Robin Hood. You are just Hood. Halfway through, she’s hallucinating Athena’s ghost — but instead of SHUTTING UP, she does the most white woman in a horror movie thing imaginable: Confesses every felony out loud. Like the ghost is gonna say, “Thank you, queen, for admitting you’re trash! You’re free to go now!” Girl, have you never seen a single episode of Dateline?? And when Candace (karma in human form) finally pulls up to collect her soul, does June take the L gracefully? NOPE. She pulls out the world’s smallest violin and plays: “I was cyberbullied. I was oppressed. The diversity industry hates white people.” Not her giving a TED Talk titled How To Play Victim 101 while standing over the career she nuked herself. And y’all… the fact that she thought falling down the stairs = opportunity to press charges against Candace?? Girl, you didn’t get attacked. You got served. By gravity. BY THE STAIRCASE. you tripped on your own lies. You faceplanted off your own ego. Candace didn’t have to push you you slipped on your fake victim tears Also can we TALK about the end? June, sitting there all alone in her crusty apartment after the hospital STILL plotting her comeback, still thinking she’s “misunderstood” like she’s some tortured anti-hero from Euphoria. No, bestie. You’re not Rue. You’re that one background character who gets written off after Episode 1 for stealing lunch money FINAL THOUGHTS: I hated June with the fire of a thousand suns, but watching her slow-motion car crash of a career was the most fun I’ve had all year. It was giving Gone Girl if Amy Dunne was stupid. I am OBSESSED. 5 STARS. For chaos. For mess. For June being the human embodiment of “it’s not my fault, your honor.” ROT IN DELULU HELL, MISS HAYWARD.
Project Hail Mary cover
5.0
2,850 clubs
edensarchives35w ago
I’m genuinely in so much pain like my heart hurts. Such a beautiful book with the absolute perfect ending that I didn’t know I needed. Proceed with caution: devastating and will make you cry 🥰
The Naturals cover
5.0
604 clubs
sohaaa ☕️🏰☆7w ago
WHAT THE ACTUAL HELL THE PLOT TWIST, NO, PLOT TWISTS, WERE ABSOLUTELY INSANE this book is really good and im excited to read the rest of the series but omg im still in shock
The Tenant cover
2.5
641 clubs
CL49w ago
Let me be honest—Freida McFadden’s books are kind of like junk food. You know they’re not exactly “good,” but you just can’t stop. The Tenant is no exception. Now, are the characters annoying? Yes. Are the plot twists absolutely bonkers? Also yes. But there’s this addictive quality to McFadden’s writing—once you start, you have to know what happens next. Her books are the perfect palate cleanser when you’re in a reading slump or just need something fast-paced and unpretentious. I wouldn’t call The Tenant “good” in a traditional sense, but it’s wildly entertaining, easy to devour, and exactly what I needed for a no-pressure read.
easy to readfast-pacedmurder

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