A great mystery does two things simultaneously: it makes you desperate to find the answer while dreading the moment the pages run out. These five bestsellers have earned their spots on the charts by delivering exactly that tension - impossible-to-guess twists, detectives you’d want at your side, and the particular satisfaction of a puzzle resolved.
| Product | Best For | Key Feature | Est. Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| ”The Maid” by Nita Prose | Cozy mystery fans | Quirky hotel maid detective, gentle and clever | $14-$22 |
| ”Holly” by Stephen King | Thriller and King fans | Holly Gibney returns in a standalone crime novel | $18-$32 |
| ”The Thursday Murder Club” by Richard Osman | British cozy mystery lovers | Four retirees solving cold cases - funny and sharp | $14-$22 |
| ”Dark Hours” by Michael Connelly | Procedural and Bosch fans | LAPD detective Renée Ballard hunts a serial rapist | $14-$28 |
| ”The Night She Disappeared” by Lisa Jewell | Psychological thriller fans | Layered British mystery with slow-burn twists | $14-$22 |
”The Maid” by Nita Prose
Molly the Maid finds a dead body in the hotel room she’s cleaning, becomes the primary suspect, and must use her extraordinary observational skills - honed by years of noticing every misplaced object in every room - to clear her name. Nita Prose’s debut is warm, witty, and clever, with a protagonist unlike anyone else in the genre. The mystery is satisfying, but it’s Molly’s voice - earnest, precise, utterly original - that made this a word-of-mouth phenomenon.
Pros:
- One of the most original mystery protagonists in years
- Cozy and clever without sacrificing the mystery’s integrity
- Launched a beloved series with multiple sequels
Cons:
- Very gentle - readers wanting gritty procedurals should look elsewhere
- Some find the pace leisurely in the middle sections
”Holly” by Stephen King
Holly Gibney - introduced in the Bill Hodges trilogy and appearing in The Outsider - gets her first solo novel, and King delivers one of his most controlled and chilling crime narratives in decades. Holly investigates disappearances in a college town and uncovers a secret that is deeply disturbing in the most human way possible. King is writing in the register of Thomas Harris rather than The Shining, and the result is a masterclass in sustained dread.
Pros:
- Holly Gibney is one of King’s most beloved characters - fans have waited for this
- Horror-adjacent thriller that works for readers outside the King universe
- King’s pacing is impeccable - the reveals land exactly when they should
Cons:
- References to COVID-era politics may date the novel for future readers
- Some King veterans find the social commentary heavier-handed than his best work
”The Thursday Murder Club” by Richard Osman
Four retired residents of an upscale English care home meet every Thursday to review unsolved cold cases - and then a real murder falls into their laps. Richard Osman’s debut novel is wickedly funny, surprisingly moving, and smarter than it has any right to be. The four sleuths - each with a professional background that gives them a unique investigative edge - are instantly loveable, and the plotting is as clean as an Agatha Christie at her tightest.
Pros:
- Genuinely funny - the humor never undercuts the mystery
- Character ensemble is warm, distinct, and deeply engaging
- Four books in the series so far, all bestsellers
Cons:
- The elderly care home setting won’t appeal to all tastes
- Compared to American crime fiction, violence and tension are deliberately muted
”Dark Hours” by Michael Connelly
Michael Connelly’s detective Renée Ballard works the overnight shift at the LAPD’s Hollywood Division - alone, by choice, and fiercely good at her job. In Dark Hours, she investigates a series of rape cases she suspects are connected by a serial predator while simultaneously working a murder case that may overlap. Connelly’s plotting is as meticulous as ever, and Ballard - stoic, smart, uncompromising - is among his best creations since Bosch himself.
Pros:
- Connelly’s procedural accuracy and pacing are unmatched in crime fiction
- Renée Ballard is a compelling standalone series lead
- Dual-plot structure gives the novel unusual depth
Cons:
- Second in the Ballard series - The Late Show provides useful backstory
- Connelly’s restrained style won’t satisfy readers who want emotional fireworks
”The Night She Disappeared” by Lisa Jewell
Lisa Jewell is the undisputed queen of British domestic suspense, and The Night She Disappeared is one of her most layered and satisfying novels. A young nanny disappears after a night out, and the story unfolds across multiple timelines and perspectives as the truth is slowly assembled. Jewell’s genius is giving every character a plausible motive and a credible point of view, so the reader suspects everyone and no one at the same time until the final reveal.
Pros:
- Multi-timeline structure keeps revelations coming steadily
- British domestic setting is atmospheric and distinctive
- Every character is fully realized - the twist feels earned, not manufactured
Cons:
- Multi-POV structure requires tracking several characters - not ideal for distracted reading
- Slow burn opening - the tension builds gradually over the first quarter
What to Look For
- Tone: The Maid and Thursday Murder Club are cozies - warm, humorous, low gore. Dark Hours and Holly are much darker. Jewell sits in the psychological thriller middle ground.
- Series vs. standalone: Thursday Murder Club, The Maid, and Dark Hours are all series openers - buy them knowing you’ll want the next book immediately.
- Protagonist type: Amateur sleuths (Thursday Murder Club, The Maid) vs. professional detectives (Dark Hours, Holly) appeals to different reading preferences.
- Audiobooks: The Thursday Murder Club narrated by Lesley Manville and The Maid narrated by the author are both outstanding.
Final Thoughts
The mystery genre has never been richer than it is right now, and these five bestsellers prove it. From Richard Osman’s witty English cozy to Michael Connelly’s procedural precision to Stephen King’s quiet dread, each book delivers the genre’s core promise: the satisfaction of seeing order restored from chaos, one clue at a time.
Frequently asked questions
Is The Maid appropriate for readers who prefer cozy mysteries over hard-boiled crime?+
The Maid is ideal for cozy mystery fans. Nita Prose's protagonist Molly the Maid is endearing and quirky rather than hard-edged, the violence happens off-page, and the hotel setting provides a charming backdrop. It launched a successful series, so readers who fall in love with Molly can continue the story in subsequent books.
Do I need to read previous Harry Bosch books before Dark Hours?+
Dark Hours features Renée Ballard rather than Harry Bosch as the primary detective, though Bosch appears in a supporting role. It is the second Renée Ballard novel and the first, The Late Show, provides useful background - but Dark Hours works reasonably well as a standalone. For series completists, starting with The Late Show is recommended.
How dark is Holly by Stephen King compared to his horror novels?+
Holly is a crime thriller rather than supernatural horror - think more along the lines of Mr. Mercedes than The Shining. The murders are disturbing and the villains are genuinely unsettling, but the scares come from human psychology rather than the supernatural. Readers who normally avoid King's horror but enjoy crime fiction should feel comfortable starting here.