Invisible Girl

by Lisa Jewell

When everyone looks suspicious, who can you actually trust?

The Quick Look

Lisa Jewell’s Invisible Girl builds a web of secrets, lies, and flawed characters against the backdrop of a quiet London neighborhood. While the first half drags under the weight of unlikable voices and unsettling themes, the story eventually gathers momentum, offering a more layered exploration of trauma, misogyny, and redemption. It’s a slow burn with a payoff that makes the perseverance worthwhile.

  • Trigger Warnings: sexual assault, infidelity, grooming, misogyny

  • Release Date: October 13, 2020
  • Pages: 365
  • Genre: Thriller / Suspense
  • Themes: mistrust, power dynamics, trauma, secrecy, growth
  • Read if you like: 
    – neighborhood thrillers
    – morally gray characters
    – stories of redemption
  • Best for: Readers with patience for a slow build and interest in psychological underpinnings of crime
  • Skip if: You need fast pacing, likable characters, or lighthearted storytelling

Enjoyment:
Writing:
Characters:
Plot:
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Enjoyment:   ♥ ♥ 
Writing:         ♥ ♥ ♥ 
Characters:   ♥ ♥ 
Plot:                ♥ ♥ ♥ 
Readability:   ♥ ♥ 
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The Full Review

PLOT & PACING
The setup moves slowly, bogged down by over-detailed scenes and little plot momentum. But around the halfway mark (page ~180), the pieces begin to lock into place, driving toward a more engaging—and even educational—reveal.

CHARACTER & VOICE
Jewell populates this novel with damaged, complicated characters, but few are easy to root for. The misogyny, selfishness, and questionable choices make for a difficult cast. Still, by the end, some key characters undergo meaningful change, which salvages part of the journey.

STYLE & ATMOSPHERE
Jewell’s prose is straightforward, with enough atmospheric detail to set the scene without becoming lyrical. At times, the focus on grit and discomfort outweighs the narrative drive.

THEMES & DEPTH
This is where the novel succeeds: it tackles issues of sexual violence, predatory behavior, and gendered power imbalances. While uncomfortable, it forces readers to confront these realities, and the ending provides a sliver of growth and reflection.

PERSONAL TAKE
The first half was a slog, and I nearly set it aside. But pushing through paid off—the second half proved much stronger. I didn’t love this book, but I’m glad I finished it; it reminded me that sometimes character growth and thematic weight only reveal themselves after patience.

The Final Verdict

A dark, slow-building thriller that stumbles early but ultimately redeems itself with thoughtful character growth and an unsettling look at hidden dangers in everyday lives.

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