SPOILER ALERT: This article reveals significant plot details about “I Will Find You,” now available on Netflix.
Harlan Coben’s newest murder mystery series on Netflix, “I Will Find You,” has become a major hit, drawing significant attention. The numbers speak for themselves.
According to Jennifer Maas from Variety, “I Will Find You” achieved the highest second-week viewership for an English-language scripted series debut on Netflix in 2026 so far. The series reached this milestone after garnering 24 million views in its opening week following its June 18 release, making it Netflix’s most successful TV show launch of the year.
During a Zoom call with Britt Lower, she shared how the series captivated me so much that I binged it over a weekend, staying up late to keep watching.
Lower commented, “That’s what’s enjoyable about this show. It’s like summer when you’re a kid, fighting sleep. When else do you get to feel, ‘I’m not tired, I’ll stay up and keep eating snacks?’ I’m thrilled for everyone. I keep receiving messages from people saying they can’t sleep, and I’m like, ‘Well, school’s out for the summer.’”
Lower plays Rachel in the eight-episode series, adapted from Coben’s novel of the same name. Rachel is a journalist for the Boston Globe determined to prove her ex-brother-in-law David (Sam Worthington) was wrongly imprisoned for the murder of his young son Matthew. The narrative unfolds with a prison escape, encounters with Boston mobsters, and entanglements with doctors and a seemingly menacing, affluent family. Additionally, a father-daughter FBI team (Chi McBride and Logan Browning) is on David’s trail.
The mystery builds to one of Coben’s trademark twists. Rachel’s ex-boyfriend, a wealthy family’s heir portrayed by Milo Ventimiglia, is revealed to have kidnapped Matthew, believing he is the boy’s father.
Lower shared, “I read the book before the scripts. We only had three or four scripts at the start of filming and we did block shooting, so we filmed a few at a time. By the end, we had all the scripts.”
Rachel initiates the story by visiting David in prison after seeing a photo on Facebook featuring a boy who resembles Matthew in the background.
“The Hayden twist explains why Rachel had that instinct initially, making everything clearer,” Lower explained. “She had a Spidey sense, linked to someone she considered her best friend.”
Hayden not only kills a detective who suspects him of involvement in Matthew’s disappearance but also shoots his own mother (Madeleine Stowe). “That’s excellent casting because Milo is the complete opposite,” Lower said. “He’s the kindest, most gentle person.”
Another twist to ponder is when Rachel and David are seen holding hands, prompting viewers, myself included, to question if a romance has developed between them.
Lower reflected, “I loved how understated that final moment was. It felt well-earned after everything we’ve been through together, leaving the story open-ended.”
She added, “They share an unspoken understanding of what each has endured, a connection deeper than romance. They share a loneliness, a belief in their family, and a determination to save the boy. There’s little room for romance amidst all this. But that gentle hand-hold gesture of support felt appropriate.”

