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First published May 5, 2026
Review everyone’s positions. Consider what they might do next. Consider what you know that they do not, and will not, until it happens, until the train that is headed toward them is unable to stop in time.
Life and death happen regardless of what you think, or guess, or put in your online review, or dream of, or work for, or choose, or want. Or deserve.
While the human condition is fragile and while everyone does have a story and while we do not know what goes on behind closed doors while we are judging books by their covers, et cetera, et cetera, you have known since the beginning, since you got to this station this morning, that there are five main characters and one of them will die.
The Premise
Five by Ilona Bannister is a psychological thriller that counts down the final minutes before a fatal tragedy at a train station, and follows five individuals who will be at the centre of it all.
A child, a mother, a businessman, an old woman, and a gambler: who would you choose to save? And who would you let die?
What I Liked
I was deeply impressed by the writing style (the prose, the tone and the dialogue); the pacing and the general construction of the story.
At the beginning of the book, we witness all the characters arriving at the station and receive very brief introductions to each of them. The book utilises a third-person omniscient point of view, where the narrator frequently steps outside the scene to speak directly to the reader.
Following these introductions, the book transitions into the backstory of one of the main characters. This is told from a standard third-person perspective, and the narrative regularly alternates between the unfolding present-day plot and a deep dive into each character's past, one by one. All the backstories were intriguing and offered insight into each character's personality.
The absolute pandemonium just before the death was incredibly realistic and well-written. I could feel the chaos and escalating panic of that split-second moment right on the page.
The countdown from 10 to 1 leading up to the death had me holding my breath!
The Twitter-esque feed following the tragedy offered a jarringly accurate look at modern human nature in the immediate wake of a crisis: genuine grief and empathy, posturing, empty platitudes, and detached dark humour.
I also loved getting a glimpse into the main characters' lives after the incident, and it was brilliant how the author held back the identity of the deceased until almost the very end.
What I Didn't Like
I didn't love any of the main characters, but I also didn't dislike them enough to care who lived or died. I was very nonchalant about their fates.
So, when the narrator said that there was probably one character I'd be okay getting rid of, and that I had chosen a favourite, it just wasn't my reality. This is where the story falters for me; I should have felt either devastated or relieved when I found out who died, not completely indifferent.
The Verdict
I rate this book 4 out of 5 stars. In spite of my indifference to which character lived or died, I absolutely had to find out which one actually dies, and that tension stayed with me from start to finish.
This story touches on sociopathy and psychopathy, PTSD, animal necropsy, cerebral palsy, gambling addiction and attempted suicide.
In a world where most books follow the same script with just a different cast, this story is a wonderfully refreshing take.