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The Trespasser by Tana French

A fierce detective faces a case that feels personal—a murdered man, a wary witness, and a squad room full of whispers. With simmering tension and psychological bite, The Trespasser pulls you into an investigation where every answer cuts deeper.

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In The Trespasser, did you enjoy ...

... a fiercely interior detective perspective under relentless workplace hostility?

Missing, Presumed by Susie Steiner

If what hooked you in The Trespasser was living inside Antoinette Conway’s head—her prickly defenses, the constant hum of squad-room harassment, and the way that pressure bends the investigation—then you’ll sink right into Manon Bradshaw’s world here. As Manon hunts for missing student Edith Hind, Steiner layers the case with Manon’s loneliness and professional friction, echoing the way Conway and Moran push forward despite Breslin’s steering and the unit’s gaslighting. The result is a case that’s as much about the detective’s psyche as the clues.

... a tightly wound police investigation that starts as a tidy domestic and unspools into something bigger?

The Dry by Jane Harper

In The Trespasser, Conway and Moran refuse to accept the easy domestic narrative around Aislinn Murray’s death, digging past staged appearances and bad leads. In The Dry, Aaron Falk returns to a parched hometown and reopens what looks like a murder–suicide; like Conway bucking Breslin’s pressure, Falk keeps tugging at small off-notes until the case widens and darkens. You’ll get that same steady accumulation of detail, sharp interviews, and the satisfaction of watching the obvious story unravel.

... the bleak, morally murky atmosphere and systemic rot inside law enforcement?

Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke

If the grim, pressure-cooker mood of The Trespasser—the after-hours interviews, the creeping sense that parts of the squad are compromised, Conway’s isolation under Breslin’s thumb—kept you turning pages, Attica Locke’s East Texas noir will hit the same nerve. Texas Ranger Darren Mathews probes two linked murders while navigating racism, small-town power games, and departmental politics that feel as suffocating as Conway’s squadroom. It’s that same dark, smoky burn with corruption close enough to choke on.

... a razor‑edged first‑person narration from a complicated, wounded woman digging into other people’s secrets?

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn

Loved being locked into Antoinette Conway’s cutting, defensive first-person voice as she needles suspects and fends off hostile colleagues? Flynn’s Camille Preaker offers a similarly intimate, unsparing perspective—every interview, every family encounter in Wind Gap is charged by the damage she carries. Like Conway parsing Aislinn Murray’s curated surfaces while battling squad sabotage, Camille reads past façades in a town determined to misdirect her, and the voice is the blade.

... the wary, slowly deepening trust between a prickly lead detective and her steadier partner?

Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith

If what stayed with you from The Trespasser was the Conway–Moran dynamic—the barbed banter, the tests of loyalty under Breslin’s manipulations, and that hard-won, we’re-in-this-together bond—then Strike and Robin’s partnership here will scratch the same itch. With a stalker targeting Robin and the firm under siege, their rapport is strained, rebuilt, and finally tempered in the fire, much like Conway and Moran learning to close ranks when the squad won’t back them.

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