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Where to Start with Mary Kubica: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Mary Kubica — whether to begin with The Good Girl or Local Woman Missing. A complete reading guide to the psychological thriller author.

By Tom Gillespie

Mary Kubica is the American psychological thriller author whose debut The Good Girl (2014) — a taut, multi-perspective abduction novel — became a New York Times bestseller and launched a career as one of the most reliably entertaining writers in the domestic psychological thriller genre. Kubica’s books are characterised by their propulsive plotting, multiple narrators, and suburban Chicago settings; she writes in the tradition established by Gillian Flynn and Paula Hawkins, with a somewhat warmer and more characterologically sympathetic sensibility than either.


Where to Start: The Good Girl (2014)

The essential Kubica — and a debut that demonstrates the form at its most efficient. Mia Dennett is thirty years old, a teacher in Chicago, the daughter of a prominent judge who has spent her life disappointing her parents in small ways. When she is abducted one night outside a bar, the novel opens up into three perspectives: Eve, her mother, a woman whose controlled life begins to unravel in her daughter’s absence; Gabe, the detective assigned to the case, who develops his own complicated relationship to the search; and Colin Thatcher, the man paid to abduct Mia, who instead takes her to a remote Minnesota cabin and hides her.

The novel’s structure alternates between ‘Before’ and ‘After’ — the days of the search and the aftermath of Mia’s rescue — which creates a double mystery: what happened during her captivity, and what happened to her psychologically as a result. Kubica is skilled at strategic information withholding: the pieces are all present, but the picture they make only becomes clear near the end.

For readers new to psychological thrillers, The Good Girl is an ideal starting point: tightly plotted, characterologically engaging, and satisfying in its resolution.


Local Woman Missing (2021)

Kubica’s most structurally complex novel — dual timelines, a vanished woman, and a child who reappears eleven years later. More ambitious in construction than The Good Girl; the right follow-on for readers who want her at full stretch.


Reading Mary Kubica

Begin with The Good Girl — it is her debut and the best introduction to her voice. Read Local Woman Missing after for her most structurally ambitious work. Both are standalone.


For the full Mary Kubica bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Mary Kubica author page on Editors Reads.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Mary Kubica?

The Good Girl (2014) is the essential starting point — Kubica's debut novel about the abduction of Mia Dennett, a Chicago teacher from a privileged family, told from multiple perspectives including her abductor's, her mother's, and a detective's. A taut, propulsive psychological thriller that became a debut bestseller and established Kubica as a major voice in the genre. Local Woman Missing is her most ambitious standalone.

What is The Good Girl about?

The Good Girl is told from three perspectives — Mia's mother Eve, the detective assigned to the case, and Colin Thatcher, the man hired to abduct Mia who instead hides her in a remote Minnesota cabin. The novel alternates between before and after Mia's rescue, building two mysteries simultaneously: what happened during the months of her captivity, and what happened to her psychologically. Kubica withholds information strategically, and the revelations arrive with genuine impact.

What is Local Woman Missing about?

Local Woman Missing (2021) is Kubica's most structurally ambitious novel — a missing persons thriller that alternates between a woman's disappearance in a Chicago suburb and the same community eleven years later, when a missing child reappears. The novel uses the two timelines to create a sustained mystery about what is connected between the two disappearances. More complex in structure than The Good Girl; equally gripping.

How does Mary Kubica compare to other psychological thriller authors?

Kubica writes in the tradition of domestic psychological thrillers popularised by Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl and Paula Hawkins's The Girl on the Train — multiple unreliable narrators, suburban settings, women in danger, secrets within families. Her books are somewhat more sympathetically characterised and less aggressively dark than Flynn's, and more plot-propulsive than character-focused. Readers who enjoyed The Girl on the Train typically find Kubica's work a natural follow-on.

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