Since bursting on the scene in 2015 with The Girl on a Train, Paula Hawkins has established herself as a reliable writer of psychological thrillers set in the U.K. The Blue Hour doesn’t plow any new ground on that front, but it’s a tight story with interesting characters that keeps you engaged until the end.
Set mostly on an isolated Scottish island named Eris, where a famous painter and ceramicist named Vanessa Chapman once lived and worked, the story begins with a discovery. A bone in one of Chapman’s sculptures, now owned by an estate, may be human. That revelation links together the three main characters — Chapman’s longtime companion Grace Winters, a Chapman scholar who works for Fairburn Estate named James Becker, and Julian, Chapman’s ex-husband who went missing 20 years ago.