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Een verslavende en intelligente psychologische thriller voor fans van Shari Lapena en Ruth Ware.


Alice Bell weet dat haar man George van mooie vrouwen houdt. Ze weet ook dat hij haar
aanbidt en dat haar zwangerschap hun relatie alleen maar hechter zal maken. Maar als ze
terugkomt van een zakenreis ziet ze in de weerspiegeling van een treinraam een prachtige
roodharige vrouw. Een vrouw die het evenbeeld is van Ruth, haar medestudente van jaren
geleden, die na een nachtelijke zwempartij spoorloos is verdwenen. Wanneer ze George
vertelt over het voorval in de trein reageert hij heel terughoudend. En als ze ontdekt dat een
oude groepsfoto vlak daarna bijgeknipt en opnieuw ingelijst is, wordt Alice wantrouwend. Want
wat weet George over Ruth, en wat was zijn relatie met haar? En kan Alice zelf nog vertrouwen
op de herinneringen aan haar studietijd?

349 pages, Paperback

First published May 27, 2019

397 people are currently reading
1835 people want to read

About the author

Nicola Rayner

3 books61 followers
Nicola Rayner was born in Abergavenny, south Wales, and works as a freelance journalist, specialising in dance and travel. The Girl Before You, her debut novel, was runner-up in the Cheltenham First Novel Competition in 2018. She lives in London with her husband and Jack Russell.

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5 stars
246 (13%)
4 stars
541 (29%)
3 stars
705 (38%)
2 stars
248 (13%)
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83 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 318 reviews
Profile Image for Michelle .
1,075 reviews1,882 followers
October 2, 2019
"If you liked My Lovely Wife, you’ll love this."

Can we stop with these comparisons? These books are nothing alike. Not at all.

Alice is married to George who is a politician turned television personality. Charming and confident he seems to always attract the attention of women. He was known as quite the ladies man during his university days but he doesn't really like to discuss his past with his wife which leads her to believe that he's keeping secrets. Now that Alice finds herself pregnant she begins to wonder if the man she married is the man she thinks he is. She has always wondered about a young woman, Ruth, that went missing in their university days together. Now she's obsessed with finding out if her husband had a role in Ruth's disappearance.

We have multiple points of view that go back and forth in time that slowly reveal what happened on that terrible night.

One thing I find that I'm growing tired of are woman that can't seem to survive without a man. Even while at university Alice secretly wondered about George and his, let's say, extra-curricular activities and yet she went on to marry him and have his child. Why, oh, why would you do this?

Another character, Kat, who was Ruth's best friend back in the day is still hung up on her lost love from then. Like, really? Fifteen years later and you still haven't gotten over him?

This book is so hard for me to rate. On the one hand I did find the mystery of Ruth's disappearance strangely compelling and I wanted to know the who and the why. Yet at the same time the slow pace made this one easy to put down even though I wanted answers.

It's certainly a relevant topic with the #METOO movement in full stride and the writing was well done. Not bad for a debut novel. 3.5 stars!

Thank you to NetGalley and Avon Books UK for providing me with a digital ARC in exchange for my honest review.



Profile Image for Amanda.
947 reviews300 followers
August 18, 2019
An intriguing start. Naomi watches her sister Ruth getting ready to go, out not knowing this may be the last time she will see her again.

The book is told from numerous people’s prospectives with different timelines. This can be either very confusing or very clever, but with this story it works perfectly.

Alice is married to George a television presenter who was formerly a politician, she has always known he was a ladies man and has often wondered about his previous relationships. They met at university where George was a
disliked by other students for his sense of entitlement and confident air.

Whilst on a train Alice thinks she sees Ruth, but Ruth went missing years before when they were at university and was presumed dead. Alice knows her husband knew Ruth but when asked he at first denies knowing her, then admits he did. Alice goes digging to find out more and as the story goes back in time secrets are revealed.

The time goes back to when Alice, George, Ruth and Kat were at university and leads up to the night that Ruth goes missing after attending a ball.

I couldn’t put this book down. I love books about friendships and secrets and this kept me guessing until the end.

Thank you to Netgalley for my copy in exchange for a review.
Profile Image for Mandy White (mandylovestoread).
2,793 reviews858 followers
May 26, 2019
The Girl Before you by Nicola Rayner was not the page turner that I had hoped for. While overall I enjoyed the story I found it to be slow and dragged out. At times it I felt that I was reading the same thing over and over. Having said that I will read more by this author as I liked the story as whole.

George Bell is an MP and now a TV star. He has a reputation of being a ladies man. His wife Alice finally falls pregnant and becomes obsessed with one of Georges exes - Ruth, a read haired beauty that he dated at university and went missing. The story is told from multiple points of view including Naomi - Ruth's sister, Kat - Ruth's best friend and Alice. Through this we learn about Ruth's and Georges past which is colourful to say the least. The ending was a bit of a let down to be honest.

Thanks to Avon Books UK and Netgalley for my advanced copy of this book to read. All opinions are my own and are in no way biased.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,002 reviews177 followers
April 2, 2022
3.5*
The Girl Before You is an intriguing mystery-thriller utilising a combined multi-narrator and dual-timeline structure. For an author to use either of these mechanisms is a challenging enterprise, but both together is a tricky venture indeed. For the most part, I felt that Nicola Rayner achieved the objective, maintaining the narrative flow and the pace of the story despite the different perspectives and frequent flashback scenes.

The story opens with a prologue in which two sisters are preparing together for a ball celebrating the end of the academic year. Heavy with foreshadowing, Naomi relates the last time she saw her elder sister, Ruth, headed off to the ball wearing an emerald dress and red "Dorothy" shoes. They're in the university town of St. Anthony's - a fictional location that the author explains is an amalgamation based on St. Andrews, Durham and Alnmouth.

The narrative then jumps forward to 2016, fifteen years since the night of the ball. Successful family lawyer Alice Bell is on a train from Edinburgh, returning home to London after a conference, when a glance at a fellow passenger prompts a startling sense of déjà vu. Alice is unable to catch her, but feels sure that she's a woman Alice knew at university, a woman who disappeared, presumed drowned. That woman's name was Ruth Walker.

The remainder of the story unfolds from three alternating perspectives; that of Alice, whose rather odious politician-turned-television presenter husband, George, was once romantically involved with Ruth; Naomi, Ruth's younger sister, who remains haunted by Ruth's unexplained disappearance; and Kat, who was at one time Ruth's closest friend at St. Anthony's. Ruth could conceivably be regarded as "the girl before" each of them - she dated George before Alice met him, she preceded Naomi both in birth order and to St. Anthony's, and she created resentment in her friendship with Kat by choosing to start a relationship with Richard, the fellow student that Kat was - and remains - fixated upon.

While both Alice and Naomi's stories are set in the novel's present, albeit with frequent reminiscence of the events leading up to Ruth's disappearance, for the bulk of the book Kat's story is told as it unfolds between 1999 and 2001. We catch up with a more mature Kat towards the story's conclusion. Initially, Alice and Naomi reflect upon Ruth's fate separately from each other, but they are drawn together by circumstances arising as the story unfolds. Both are at a similar stage in their first pregnancy, which, for different reasons, has made the search for the truth regarding what happened to Ruth particularly important for both of them.

I felt that Nicola Rayner accurately captured the sense of tangible potential, personal angst and social consciousness that characterises the university (college) years for many of us. Paradoxically, we're at our physical peak whilst also battling self-consciousness, we're excited to test the boundaries but need to be wary of those whose motives are anything but honourable, our futures are literally in our hands, yet many of the choices we have to make are daunting.

Nicola Rayner explores themes including female friendship and solidarity, sexuality and power dynamics, romantic obsession and the agony of unrequited love, misogyny and date-rape culture, impending parenthood, and trust within marital relationships. While I felt that the plot was intriguing and well-constructed, I occasionally felt that the pace slackened during the middle of the book, and that the somewhat jarring conclusion left me with many unanswered questions.

The Girl Before You is an impressive debut for Nicola Rayner, and a good read. I'd recommend it to readers who enjoy academic settings and split-timeframe narratives.

My thanks to the author, Nicola Rayner, publisher HarperCollins Australia / Avon Books, and NetGalley, for the opportunity to read and review this title. I can only apologise that it's taken me so long to get to it.
Profile Image for Louise Wilson.
3,670 reviews1,690 followers
April 26, 2019
3.5 ⭐️ rounded up to 4

Alice has always been haunted by the women from her husbands past. As an MP and now a TV personality, George Bell's reputation as a ladies' man precedes him. But when Alice falls pregnant, her unease becomes an obsession.

This is a dual timeline story about Ruth's disappearance. The story starts of slowly before picking up its pace. Roth had went missing some time ago. People tell us about her that she went to Uni with her. We also hear from her sister Naomi. They tell us how they have dealt with her disappearance many years ago. The ending of the story fell a bit short. There were several loose ends that I needed tied up. Apart from that it's a decent enough read.

I would like to thank NetGalley, Avon Books UK and the author Nicola Rayner for my ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for 8stitches 9lives.
2,853 reviews1,724 followers
May 27, 2019
The Girl Before You is one of those psychological thrillers where the synopsis could is interchangeable with that of another book in the genre without losing the gist of the story. That's because there are so many novels effectively repeating the same trope-laden tale over and over, and this book is no exception. Don't get me wrong it's a fun, light, take-with-a-pinch-of-salt type of read and perhaps decent for a summer holiday or lounging around but nothing special or original.

However, I feel the fact that it is based at a university with all the usual student shenanigans means it should be targeted more at a young adult/teen audience as the sexual liaisons, endless drinking and drug taking started to become annoying to me. This is a domestic thriller that is merely a mediocre read and explores the notion that you can never truly know someone.

It's not the worst book I've ever picked up, but I was almost willing it to be over to engage with something better. The statement on the cover professing that you will be left gasping at the ending couldn't have been further from the truth. Many thanks to Avon for an ARC.
Profile Image for Julie Parks.
Author 1 book86 followers
June 5, 2021
This is a really full-body reading experience.
There are so many events, so many names, so many twists to think about. I wouldn't recommend this as a light beach read exactly.

The story is told from various angles and timelines and thus requires a thorough sit-through, not just a when time allows skipping through kinda read.

My biggest struggle was the fact that I've recently read two other books with sisters and death and possibly one sister narrator, and it felt like walking through a jungle of comparisons in my head. At times, if I had to put the book down and come back to it later, I kept mixing up all the stories.

I'll tell you the books in case you've read them and might develop a similar disorder lol.
One was Into the Water and the other Imaginary Girls and somehow the vibe and the feel I've kept from those stories was overpowering this one.

But overall, this was a well-written and engaging plot with interesting (maybe too many to count but still) characters.

Thank you Netgalley for the advance copy in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Mark.
1,688 reviews
May 30, 2019

‘The Girl Before You’ by Nicola Rayner published by Avon Books and Out NOW ( published 27/6 )

384 Pages

All the way through this book I felt I had read it before, I hadn’t! and that doesn’t mean it wasn’t good, it and the themes just felt ‘familiar’......
I am not sure if the tag line ‘This Years Girl on The Train’ helped, this is distracting and also quite an accolade to live up to!
Anyway the story is....rich and privileged uni kids, excessive drink, drugs, sex and all the woes that came with that.....a end of Uni’ ball’, someone dies, secrets are made and kept and life continues.....
Fast forward years later and secrets have remained secret, lives have been led....and then the girl who died is ‘seen’ ( on a train granted ) and the past starts to unravel and come back to haunt them all, some
of them have no desire to revisit their Uni days, some need to to come to terms with what happened to them....and the sightings continue...did she really die?
In the mix is a ( now ) M.P. who was, in the day, a real ‘ladies man’ with his bezzie....of course there is more to that than meets the eye, that story and the sightings story with an added touch of teacher/uni student lesbian love all add up to quite a shocking story with many characters battling to get to various truths!
The ending is very quick, after reading 350 pages I prefer a robust ending rather than a ‘mmmmmm so what did that mean’ kinda conclusion
Strong and entitled characters, some uncomfortable subjects, good writing and a VERY unsettling teddy that reappears after years called ‘Nonny’ ( yep Nonny ) all tinged with as said ‘Ive read this before’ led me to a good read which I enjoyed, up to a point
7/10 4 Stars
Profile Image for Carlos.
483 reviews22 followers
May 22, 2019
The Girl Before You is being marketed as " The new Girl on the train...The ending will leave you gasping" and after reading it all I can say is I'm not sure I've read the same book as the person who wrote that line.

While I'm not the biggest "Girl on the train" fan I decided to give this a try cause the synopsis sounded good but, oh boy, was this boring. A psychological thriller with absolutely no thrills.

The story is told through three different POVs and alternates between the past and the present. It's extremely slow-paced and the same scenes keep repeating over and over again while the plot goes nowhere. All the characters are super bland, the writing is nothing special and the constante switching between past and present is pretty confusing at times.

And what about the ending that will leave you gasping? I assure you gasping was not one of the things it left me doing. The final twist's got to be one of the most underwhelming twists I've ever read and it felt completely anticlimactic. And when done right I don't mind an open ending but that's not the case here so I ended up being pretty annoyed.

Thanks to NetGalley and Avon Books UK fro providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Bridget.
2,789 reviews132 followers
December 27, 2019
This book was right up my street! Following a slightly slow start, the pace picked up considerably and I was immersed in this fabulous dual timeline story. It followed the viewpoints of different players in a disappearance both at that time and in the current day.

"The Girl Before You" was a very well thought out and engaging story and was edgy enough to keep my interest. With absorbing characters and intriguing themes it was definitely worth the read and for me, the elements all cleverly tied in together to complete a nice little package.

I received a complimentary digital copy of this novel, at my own request, from Avon Books via NetGalley. This review is my own unbiased opinion.
Profile Image for Liz Barnsley.
3,765 reviews1,076 followers
April 16, 2019
A gripping psych thriller and multi arc drama really very good.

I love books that look back to college or university days it's one of my favourite types of dual timeline to read and this one was really very clever - different interactions and motivations and in present time a wife who starts questioning everything she thought she knew about her husband...

There's a stellar cast of strong female characters and a thought provoking underneath to it all plus the plotting is taut and effective and beautifully done.

Overall a really great read.
Profile Image for Roman Clodia.
2,914 reviews4,681 followers
March 20, 2019
I'm pretty jaded when it comes to yet another domestic thriller with 'The Girl...' in the title but this one came with The Guardian's recommendation of note-perfect prose and an addictive story-line... but, you know, it's just the same-old stuff: switching narrators/PoV, a then-and-now storyline, privileged men, #metoo women, the wife who suddenly realises she doesn't know her husband, the devious best friend, girl-on-girl competition for men, a double helping of pregnancy, the dead sister trope - sounds familiar, no?

Plenty of plot-holes and thin characterisation here: Alice (the wife) is supposedly the most brilliant divorce lawyer in London, so how come it's taken her 15 years to realise that her Tory MP-turned-TV-presenter husband is a sleazeball? Ruth (the eponymous Girl) is loved up one minute, incensed the next, then loved up with someone different (and tru-love means bonking in the public toilets of student pubs - yeurch!). L-o-o-o-n-g chapters about Ruth's sister's burgeoning sexuality slow down the momentum - they are kinda relevant in a sideways fashion but could have been fashioned with way more economy - I started skimming them.

The fact that a brand new character is introduced at 93% in order to bring the whole thing to a wacky climax sort of speaks for itself. And the more you think about the ending, the more improbable it all seems. But I guess that's the point: we're not really supposed to subject this kind of book to much critical scrutiny, are we?

On the plus side, it's certainly readable when you want something that is pure switch-off entertainment but why The Guardian extolled this is a mystery (actually, more of a mystery than that of the book which - surely - we can pretty much see from the start). There's a slightly laboured, pulling-the-puppet-strings to it all: people don't make sense, don't really behave like this in real life.

But for addicts of Girl World where mysterious postcards and soft toys appear in the post, where everyone remembers exactly what happened 15 years ago, where no-one is what they seem, no-one can be trusted, how well do you know your friends and husband is plastered everywhere, this is a fun diversion. Just be ready for lots of student drinking/drugs/casual sex - and some wonderfully nutty plotting. Oh, and no sign of that supposedly pitch-perfect prose. 😉
384 reviews44 followers
March 28, 2019
I liked this book from the start-Ruth had gone missing quite a while back and you get a few people from her past reminisce about their relationships from when they were at Uni with her. One point of view is told by Ruth's sister-Naomi. (yes, like the Bible story.) We see how they are dealing or not dealing with her disappearance so many years later. All of their stories seem unrelated but the author manages to intertwine them just enough so you know beyond a doubt that eventually it will be confirmed that they are very related. There were some unbelievable moments but not enough to me to downgrade the writing. Of course, this is all my opinion and others could be more critical but I still feel the story was unique enough to warrant the 4 stars. (Yes, they did drink alot, had sex in public bathrooms -ugh, and there was the #metoo movement featured but I still think the author kept you engaged in finding out what really happened to Ruth.)
I definitely recommend this book as a unique thriller.The author, Nicola Raynor, definitely builds up the suspense bit by bit. I eagerly await her next book.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for a chance to read and review.
Profile Image for Rachel.
1,454 reviews153 followers
November 2, 2019
*thank you to Netgalley, Nicola Rayner and HarperCollins Publishers Australia for an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review*


3 stars.

I was eager to start this as I read that it's along similar lines to Girl on the Train and yes it was, especially at the beginning. But what I discovered with this was the story was a bit too slow for me. It was still good but I'd rather have had it been more fast paced as I found my attention drifted quite a few times. It read more like a drama/woman's fiction than the psychological thriller that I'd been hoping for.
Profile Image for Jess The Bookworm.
768 reviews103 followers
June 10, 2022
Alice is married to George, an MP turned TV personality, he is a well-known man, and also a well-known ladies' man. When George and Alice were still at university a girl named Ruth went missing. Ruth was a stunning redhead, someone who caught everyone's attention, including George's at the time.

When Alice thinks she sees Ruth on a train one day, she starts digging into the past to try to figure out how Ruth was involved with her husband, and to figure out the story with all of their friends from the time.

This story reminded me of the new TV series "Anatomy of a Scandal" in a lot of ways. I battled to get into it at first, but I was somewhat gripped in the end.
Profile Image for Claire Wilson.
326 reviews12 followers
April 22, 2019
The Girl Before You is one of those slow-burning books that you don't realise is fantastic until you get to the end and become disappointed that it's over. The story is told over two different time frames, the time leading up to Ruth's disappearance and years later. This book will leave you gasping, with characters you will hate and others that are relatable. 4 stars
Profile Image for isia.
89 reviews13 followers
January 1, 2022
Czuje się rozczarowana ta książka, spodziewałam się lepszego kryminału, akcja tak naprawdę to może ostatnie 20% książki i też nie porywa… Dość przewidywalna, a niektóre wątki imo niepotrzebnie rozbudowane aż w takim stopniu. Cieszę się, że to pozycja z odsłuchu, bo inaczej bym powiedziała, że zmarnowałam czas. Nawet nie 3 a 2,5 gwiazdki.
Profile Image for Jenn.
252 reviews6 followers
April 15, 2020
1.5 * . What a disaster. The ending was the only thing keeping me reading, and it was a huge let down.
Profile Image for Cherlynn | cherreading.
2,142 reviews1,005 followers
September 28, 2024
I would not call this a thriller because it's not thrilling at all and barely a mystery.

Firstly, there were too many character names (note that I didn't say 'characters'). Because the story wasn't gripping or engaging enough to keep me turning the pages, I kept losing track of who's who and who's with who e.g. Teddy and Dan, Richard and George, Kat and Alice and Naomi, Christie and Carla etc. All the names seemed similar to me and I couldn't care less about any of them.

Three female POVs is also three too many for this book because they were all extremely dull and boring. Ruth was definitely the most colourful, vibrant and interesting character but of course we don't hear from her.

Not much actually happens in the whole book, with the only interesting bits being the flashbacks to college days. There is close to zero tension and absolutely no action at all. The mystery of Ruth's disappearance was the only thing that kept me ploughing on but unfortunately, the reveal was disappointing too. Everything pretty much falls in place only in the second last chapter.

I did like the ending and what it hinted at, however, so this wasn't a total waste of my time. But thrillers fans who are seeking shock and suspense, twists and turns, and a solid mystery should look elsewhere.

Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for an arc of this book.
Profile Image for Eve.
782 reviews52 followers
Read
January 27, 2020
Domestic Thriller / Mystery / Contemporary

Alice thinks she see Ruth on a train, a beautiful red-haired student who went missing 15 years ago after a ball. When she mention this encounter to George, he shows indifference and doesn't seem to remember his ex. Alice can not let go of the chance meeting and decide to get in touch with Ruth's sister Naomi. But does she really want to know what her husband has been up to behind her back all these years?

This story was slow-paced, disjointed and did not flow well to me. The timelines and multiple POVs jumped around way too much for me to even want to follow the story. The same scenes kept repeating over and over again. I didn't enjoy the endless drinking, drug taking, everyone having casual sex with everyone. Do people no longer have any self-respect? Any intelligence? Any morals?

It didn't even seem to actually be a thriller, more like a domestic drama with a tiny bit of mystery.
Author didn't bother to develop her characters, plot sounded unrealistic, unbelievable and too drawn out (I'm supposed to believe that Alice sees strange woman for only a moment and she is instantly sure that she's a woman who dissapeared more than a decade ago and her husband must have something to do with her dissapearance? Also why marry and have his child when she knew already back in the uni days that he was a womanizer? As George was so fond of sleeping around, then why get married? There were more things that bothered me and didn't work for me at all).

And finally: Show, don't tell! Ehh, next, please!

description
Profile Image for Nicki Kendall.
853 reviews8 followers
July 16, 2020
Thanks #netgalley for the ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review. This book drew me in from the beginning and even though I was at first a bit confused by the multiple people's perspectives, that is more on me than a reflection of the book itself, I couldn't put it down once I had all of the characters sorted out in my head. It's filled with twists and peoples secrets all deliciously woven together. #nicolarayner #thegirlbeforyou #netgalley #tea_sipping_bookworm #goodreads #amazon #kindle #bookqueen #greatreads #bookstagram #thriller #litsy #plottwists
Profile Image for Alexandra WhimsyPages.
219 reviews25 followers
September 9, 2019
I've been meaning to write the review for «The Girl Before You» by Nicola Raynor for a very long time. I read it back at the beginning of May, and have been trying to come up with some words to describe this book ever since.

The Observer compared this book to «The Girl On The Train» by Paula Hawkins but in my opinion, it didn’t live up to this comparison. It's definitely not The Girl On The Train and it's definitely not a book I will reread at any point.

The reason why it took me so long to finish this review was that I didn't have anything to say about this book, which is sad because I always try to find something to talk about in every single book I read.

The structure of the book takes us from the present time, where Alice is happily married to George and expecting their first child, back to college where George was enjoying the attention of every girl in college, slowly unraveling the story of Ruth’s disappearance.

It all begins with Alice seeing a woman on the train who looks very similar to red-haired Ruth, the girl she used to be friends with in college and who disappeared under very mysterious circumstances.

I really like the “now and then” writing style as well as the combination of present and past. This technique makes me very excited to find the truth, to find out who did what and how it actually all happened. I was so excited to see the twists, but I wasn’t satisfied when they actually happened.

My first complaint is that this story is very forgettable. It's been 3 months since I’ve read the book, and I don't even remember the twists anymore! When these are usually those elements that are very hard to forget- «The Girl on the Train», «Gone Girl» - I’ve read these books over 3 years ago and will forever remember how dumbstruck I was by some of the revelations of these stories!

Another miss for me was the poor characterization. I know that most of mysteries / thrillers are primarily plot-driven, but I still need at least one character to care about. In «The Girl Before You» I didn’t connect to any of them, I didn’t really what would happen to any of them. There was no risk element to keep me on the edge of my seat.

The characters were very stereotypical and bland - some popular guys, some popular girls and someone who inspired to be someone else.

Overall, this wasn’t a bad read, that’s why I gave it 3 stars. It just wasn’t anything special, it didn’t stand out from the bunch of other mysteries and thrillers, and I easily forgot it as soon as I finished the last chapter.
Profile Image for Anisa.
262 reviews
July 21, 2022
Bro what? That was horror. Absolutely terrible. What the fuck kind of ending was that. I knew I should’ve DNF’d oml I’m sad I wasted my time. I don’t even want to write a review because I don’t even WANT to remind myself of this plot.

The first half took me so long to read since it was so slow that I was skipping stuff but I didn’t want to waste my time reading this so I read the second half in a sitting. The ending was not even worth it and it was a -2/10. The whole point of this was figuring out what happened to Ruth, and by the end WE STILL DONT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO RUTH. All we know is that her lookalike was raped to make it look like it was Ruth so they had leverage on her, there was a fight and Miss Wick got pushed down the stairs, died, and they buried her. But it doesn’t make sense because Naomi kept saying over and over that Ruth would never work with George. And did Dan really ‘accidentally’ die of an overdose? Bit coincidental. And what actually happened to Ruth? Did she run away because she thought that Dan would kill her out of fear that she’d expose him? But then if that’s the case, why would she not tell her family? Or Kat? The police would be on her side. And why does she think it’s okay to come out with her story now, what makes now any different? Makes no sense. Even her shoes being placed near the beach?

And the ‘reuniting’ was horrible as well. Naomi comes home to voices and they stop when she speaks. Only to see red shoes pointing to the kitchen. This review is so aggressive but I’m so mad that I read this 😭 how can I rate this less than 1? Ambiguous endings are only good POST- clarification. Otherwise WHAT WAS THE POINT OF *THIS* BOOK IF WE ARE JUST AS IN THE DARK AS THE START??

Okay I’m back 2 minutes later because I saw a review talking about the POVs and i had to rant about that in mine too. So unnecessary. ESPECIALLY Alice’s. What did she bring to the story, can I actually know? She was basically the reader: she knew absolutely nothing (about ANYONE) and was confused all the time. Her whole POV was irrelevant and if anything, should’ve had a chapter at the end in an epilogue or something of her dealing with the repercussions of his actions. And the whole ‘cheating on her with her bsf’? What did that add as well please 😭
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jessica.
885 reviews209 followers
August 6, 2019
Blog | Twitter | Instagram

Review was originally posted here to Booked J. As always, a copy of this book was provided by the publisher or author in exchange for my honest review. This does not effect my opinion in any way.

The Girl Before You, not to be confused with The Girl Before, was not at all what I expected it to be. At all. Which, to put it bluntly, is a brilliant thing to note. The Girl Before You was highly addictive, if not a little generic and slowly paced in terms of modern thrillers, and I found myself, too, haunted by the story at hand.

Despite its flaws: Nicola Rayner sets a darkened atmosphere beautifully, covering each plotline in the intensity necessary to thrillers and mysteries. At times, it felt a bit stilled in development and as if we were going around in circles via the narration. This could be less to do with the story and Rayner's prose, and more to do with the fact that I read far too many thrillers.

This doesn't make The Girl Before You bad, per se, but at times it makes the story feel all-too-familiar or like you've been circling the same thing for too long. I had some issues, from time to time, where I felt like the story was dragging on and losing a bit of steam. That being said, it's never enough to fully take away from the fact that The Girl Before You is a genuinely good thriller--it just may not be for everyone.

The Girl Before You has a lot going for it--great setting and mystery, characters that feel impossible to look away from or forget and to-the-point thrills and chills via psychological thriller traits and, at the end of the day, will satiate many's desire for a good mystery to breeze through. I can easily see this being portrayed on screen or opening new readers up to the genre.
Profile Image for Fay Flude.
760 reviews43 followers
May 25, 2019
This is a dark tale of men mistreating women under the guise of partying fun, where women strive to find their sexual freedom during their university years with devastating consequences. George and Dan are repellent characters, Naomi so endearing and Alice who is mostly brave but should never have married George in the first place.
However the whole book is centred around Ruth, the magnetic redhead, who is feisty, wild and ends up missing. Presumed to have died by drowning, nothing is clear cut as her body has never been found. So she has 'disappeared' and her sister Naomi, having lived for 15 years mourning the loss of her sister eventually links up with Alice, George's wife, when Alice is determined that something sinister has been going on and perhaps still is, following her sighting of someone who could be Ruth on a train.
I liked the descriptions of college life, the area it is set in and the women's determination to seek the truth, but I didn't enjoy the endless drinking and drug taking, although this is very much in keeping with the setting and student life it portrays. It is not a linear story, the plot weaves in and out of the past and the ending is so very typical of real life. There is no answer, no final resolution, just a vague sense of uncertainty that will carry on indefinitely.
Profile Image for Capri.
58 reviews3 followers
October 2, 2022
3,5
Momentami strasznie nużąca, z fragmentami nic nie wnoszącymi do fabuły..
Profile Image for Bethany Rutledge.
Author 5 books16 followers
July 4, 2019
I enjoyed The Girl Before You. First off, it's tough to pull off three POVS + past present, but the author weaves them seamlessly.

This was a slow burn and had enough twists and turns to keep experienced thriller readers guessing.
I would recommend checking it out.


She was his. She was perfect. And then, she was gone.An addictive and twisting psychological suspense, perfect for summer.

If you liked My Lovely Wife, you’ll love this.Alice has always been haunted by the women from her husband’s past. As a politician and now a TV personality, George Bell’s reputation as a ladies’ man precedes him. But when Alice falls pregnant, her unease becomes an obsession.

And there’s one ex in particular she can’t get out of her head, a beautiful student who went missing before they finished university: Ruth.When Alice thinks she see Ruth on a train, she can’t shake the feeling there’s more to the disappearance than George has told her.

But does she really want to know what her husband has been up to behind her back all these years?

Thanks to #netgalley and #avonbooks for letting me read.
Profile Image for Stacey Barnes.
101 reviews2 followers
August 14, 2021
Great story about beautiful, erratic Ruth with her lovely red hair and her jealous friend Kat, her sister who idolises her, Niomi and their time at university leading to Ruth's disappearance. Alice, wife of George who went to University with Ruth has a feeling all isn't what it seems with Ruth's disappearance 15 years ago and as she starts to dig, it is revealed her husband and current best friend aren't who she thought they were. Alice then tracks down Ruth's former boyfriend Richard, who is quite frosty with her knowing she is George's wife and she then tracks down Niomi, the two of them return to the scene of the crime, fictional town St Anthony's and discover Ruth isn't the girl they thought she was. Lots of twists and turns, although was quite disappointed by the ending and I felt a lot of what happened to the characters in the story didn't tie up at the end. But overall a good holiday read.
Profile Image for Anya Leonard.
371 reviews5 followers
March 15, 2019
Though this book started out slow, it picked up quickly and I was wrapped into the dual timeline story of Ruth’s disappearance. It follows the viewpoints of different players in Ruth’s disappearance at the time and current day. It differed from a lot of other thrillers in that as far as I could tell, I had no idea what was occurring until almost the very end and it was very well thought out.

The story became more interesting as the book went on and I found myself seeking it out instead of school readings I should have been doing [oops.] The story evolved as it went on and became a very well thought out and engaging story, tying all the story elements together in a nice little package.

This ebook was provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Agustina.
883 reviews7 followers
August 17, 2019
I received an advance copy in exchange for an honest review. Thanks Nicola Rayner!

I would give this book 3 1/2 stars.

The story is told from the perspective of 4 women: Ruth, Naomi, Alice, and Kat. Each chapter is told by a different character, sometimes in the present and sometimes in the past. I like the writing style, it was easy to follow and you could see how each person read the situation differently. At times I felt that I was reading without getting anyway closer to the resolution, which in my case can pull my interest elsewhere. I did enjoy how the story develops in the end.
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