Friday 9 December 2022

"The Woman in Cabin 10" by Ruth Ware (2016)


 This is my second book by Ruth Ware, The Turn of the Key being the first. To be frank, I expected more from Ware, but considering that The Woman in Cabin 10 was published in 2016 while The Turn of... in 2019, I guess all is forgiven. This clearly shows that Ware is maturing as a writer and I hope her next releases would get better.


But what about The Woman in Cabin 10? Is it worth reading?

Well, in the world of books, The Woman in Cabin 10 feels like the jack-of-all-trades. It's got something from everything, and by something, I mean 'an aspect' of other authors' works. Some readers made comparisons between this book and The Girl on the Train. Ware isn't even hiding it. Printed on the book's cover, The Sun describes the book as the following: "Agatha Christie meets The Girl on the Train." 


When I read that, I thought 'Sheesh! At least be subtle about it!'


I'm not insinuating that Ware plagiarized other authors' works. She just took their formula and, sadly enough, did a bad job at executing the ideas. I mean, with a bit of some tightening here and there, the book could have made it to four stars... but that was in another universe.


Don't get me wrong though. The book isn't bad, not at all. At least not the first 40% which I was going to literally pour gasoline on it and let it burn to a crisp. *no offense Ware*

The section between 40% ~ 90% was the crème-de-la-crème of the whole book. Good building-up. Tense claustrophobia. Decent plot twists.

And then came the ending... which was-hmmm-not so good, and not so bad. It just felt like a flat denouement, falling for the cliche of the rich bad guy.


________________________

Summary: If you're looking for an entertaining book and not one to leave its mark on you, then this one is for you. It has a decent plot with decent plot twists that will keep you turning the pages... but sadly, you'll forget about the whole book as you're finished with it.



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