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7 of the best race-against-time thrillers

A tense thriller can change our perception of time – your journey doesn’t take as long, the wait for a doctor’s appointment goes faster, you thought it was only 11:00pm so how can it possibly be 1:00am already? For me, thrillers that have a race against the clock are the ones that are most likely to make me forget not only what the time is, but what is going on around me. I call them escape pod books because I can temporarily lose myself in their pages. Here are seven of the best race-against-time thrillers.

7 of the best race-against-time thrillers

12 Months to Live by James Patterson

12 Months to Live by James Patterson

Jane Smith is a top criminal defence attorney who has made a name for herself by representing New York’s rich and famous. She goes above and beyond for her clients – often taking on the role of investigator, as well as lawyer. While preparing her defence of a man accused of a triple homicide, she is hired to solve a cold case. But then the bombshell lands: a terminal medical diagnosis. She has just one year to live – unless her enemies kill her first. This is a true race-against-time thriller, given Jane’s limited time-frame to solve the murders, all while trying to survive.

No One Saw A Thing by Andrea Mara

No One Saw a Thing by Andrea Mara

In No One Saw a Thing, Sive lives every parent’s worst nightmare when her two little girls jump on the train ahead of her – and then the doors close. When she races to the next station, only one of her daughters is waiting for her. Has her daughter been taken? Sive has to piece together the clues but the more time that passes, the less likely it is that she will ever see her daughter again. This is a clever, claustrophobic page-turner with an incredibly fast pace. You’ll devour it in one sitting.

Room by Emma Donoghue

Room by Emma Donoghue

Room is about the most tense of all situations: not only is a young woman imprisoned with her child, but she fears that soon their captor is going to turn off the electricity and stop feeding them. Before they starve to death or freeze, they have to escape. Nobody, apart from her captor, knows where this young woman is, nor even that she’s still alive. It is a deeply personal and lonely race against the clock, told through the eyes of a five-year-old child. I had to read this novel twice, the first time quickly skimming through the pages, desperate to know if their plan will work, and then the next time more slowly to enjoy the brilliant writing.

I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes

I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes

Unlike Room, with the lives of just two people at stake, this novel has the hero, ‘Pilgrim’, racing against the clock to save the whole of America. The writer’s roots as a screenwriter shows – he paces his story like a bullet and effortlessly transports the reader, along with his main protagonist, all over the world, most hauntingly the Hindu Kush, as he hunts for the man who is planning to execute an atrocity. It’s a blockbuster of a book that is perfect for people that love high concept thrillers, mind-blowingly well plotted.

The Last by Hanna Jameson

The Last by by Hanna Jameson

In this strikingly original novel the stakes are even higher – it’s not just America’s fate that’s at stake, but the entire world’s. Or has that race against the clock already been lost? Jon Keller doesn’t know if the hotel he’s staying is the only place left with people still alive following nuclear devastation. Added to which, criminals don’t respect the nuclear apocalypse because he finds the murdered body of a girl and is determined to find out what happened to her. There’s an eerie sense reading the book that the race against the clock is actually in the reader’s real world, with geo-politics potentially leading to catastrophe, making for an extremely unsettling as well as gripping read.

Dark Matter by Michelle Paver

Dark Matter by Michelle Paver

This is not a book to read at night. A terrifying ghost-thriller, it is set in the remote wilderness of the far north. 28-year-old Jack is part of an Arctic expedition of five men and eight huskies who camp on a remote, uninhabited bay. But one by one Jack’s companions are forced to leave and winter closes in. Then Jack realises he’s not alone. Something is out there in the dark. Soon, he will reach the point of no return – when the sea will freeze, making escape impossible.

The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold

The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold

Uniquely, this story is told by the victim of rape and murder – a 14-year-old girl called Susie Salmon – who narrates the story from heaven. Susie tells us about that terrible afternoon and the identity of her murderer. The tension of Susie not being able to tell the police and her family is almost unbearable. This is the story of what happens when the race against the clock has been lost, when nobody realised in time. But it’s also about what happens next and that is where the depth and genius of the novel lies.

What are your favourite race-against-time thrillers? Let us know in the comments below!

Rosamund Lupton

Three Hours

This article has been updated; it was originally published in 2020.

Rosamund Lupton, author of Three Hours
Rosamund Lupton, author of Three Hours
Rosamund Lupton

Rosamund Lupton’s new novel, Three Hours, is a Sunday Times bestseller.
‘A brilliant literary thriller… moving, masterly’ Sunday Times

Rosamund Lupton is the author of Sister, a BBC Radio 4 ‘Book at Bedtime’, a Sunday Times and New York Times bestseller, winner of the Strand Magazine critics award and the Richard and Judy Book Club Readers’ Choice Award. Her next two books Afterwards and The Quality of Silence (also a Richard and Judy pick) were Sunday Times bestsellers. Her books have been published in over thirty languages.

Follow Rosamund on Twitter.

1 Comment

    I was really underwhelmed by Dark Paver. Was really excited as it was a ghost story, but was very disappointed. 🙁

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