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Review | The Girl on the Train author Paula Hawkins’ new novel, A Slow Fire Burning, is a whodunit on an Agatha Christie scale

  • Paula Hawkins’ third novel reduces the part of London in which it is set to a village, one populated by damaged characters who bear grudges and hidden burdens
  • These are revealed when two deaths rock the community and police are called in. There is no genius detective here, however – so who’ll solve the crimes?

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Houseboats moored on Regents Canal, London, the setting for Paula Hawkins’ third novel, A Slow Fire Burning. Photo: Getty Images

A Slow Fire Burning by Paula Hawkins pub. Riverhead Books

A Slow Fire Burning is the latest page-turner from Paula Hawkins, the Zimbabwean-born author of the immensely successful The Girl on the Train (2015).

Towards the front of Hawkins’ third novel is a map of a part of inner London identifying the homes of seven characters. Five of them have committed various thefts: money, keys, jewellery, notebooks and life stories, and the other two – mother and estranged son – have died just weeks apart.

Here they are in approximate order of appearance: Irene, a self-described “cliché of old age”; damaged, uninhibited Laura (wrong in the head and body); handsome, troubled, murdered Daniel; damaged, ugly Miriam (she sees a potential alliance with Laura); bereft Carla, stranded between grief and connection; drunken, failed, dead Angela; and plagiarist has-been author Theo.

A map from A Slow Fire Burning, by Paula Hawkins, showing where the main characters live. Photo: Riverhead Books
A map from A Slow Fire Burning, by Paula Hawkins, showing where the main characters live. Photo: Riverhead Books

All live or lived within a short walk of each other (and each chapter switches to a different character’s perspective). In Hawkins’ hands, this bit of London is depicted not as part of the great metro­polis but as a village centred on Regent’s Canal, an Agatha Christie scale of setting where all suspects interact and overlap.

Bernard Cohen is an award-winning novelist, based in Sydney, Australia. He is also Director of The Writing Workshop, and has taught creative writing to 100,000 young people. His latest book is the short story collection When I Saw the Animal (UQP).
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