Lisa Jewell is a British author of dark domestic thrillers and psychological suspense novels whose books — including The Night She Disappeared and The Family Upstairs — consistently top UK and US bestseller lists.
Lisa Jewell spent over a decade as a bestselling author of warmhearted contemporary fiction before pivoting in her mid-career to darker, twistier psychological suspense. The shift worked spectacularly: her thrillers since Then She Was Gone (2017) have made her one of the most popular writers in the genre, with a talent for building dread inside apparently ordinary domestic settings and characters who are never quite as benign as they first appear.
The Family Upstairs, published in 2019, follows a young woman who inherits a London townhouse where three adults were found dead twenty-five years earlier. The alternating narratives — past and present, London and southern France — give Jewell room to build a portrait of cult-like domestic control and its long aftermath. It is atmospheric and compulsive, if not especially concerned with psychological realism over plot momentum. The Night She Disappeared, centered on a missing couple and the people left behind, uses a similar structural architecture with confident results.
Jewell’s thrillers are not literary fiction in disguise. They prioritize momentum over depth, and some readers find the revelations feel engineered rather than inevitable. Her villains, while not cartoonish, tend to function as mechanisms for the plot rather than fully rounded characters. But she is excellent at what she does — keeping readers reading, staging reveals with clean timing, and rooting her suspense in recognizable social worlds. For readers who want intelligent, well-paced domestic thrillers, she is among the most reliable practitioners.