Ruth Ware is a very successful writer whose novels of psychological suspense show a real talent for, and commitment to, ingenious plotting. Over the past fifteen years or so there have been many psychological thrillers that are said to have 'a jaw-dropping twist', but in some cases, I find that the finale is quite a let-down. It's one thing to come up with a brilliant premise, something else to deliver a resolution that doesn't disappoint. Ruth Ware's ability to do both is what has put her in the elite. I've never met her in person, but I did once chair an online panel on which she was a speaker, and very good she and her distinguished colleagues were too.
I read her novel The Woman in Cabin 10 several years ago, and now I've had a chance to watch the Netflix version of the book. It's a story that seems to me to be a modern version of the kind of emotional thriller at which Cornell Woolrich used to excel - in books like Phantom Lady. A protagonist comes across someone, who promptly disappears - and everyone else denies that they ever existed. This is a set-up that I love, as long as the explanation works.
The cast is very good. The consistently excellent Keira Knightley plays Lo Blacklock, a journalist invited to join a party on a superyacht owned by billionaire Anne Bulmer, who is terminally ill, and her husband Richard (Guy Pearce). The guests include a doctor played by Art Malik and a chap called Heatherley (David Morrissey). The production, equally, is top-notch.
Lo finds herself in the wrong cabin (cabin 10, next to her own) while trying to avoid her ex, a photographer who just so happens to be on board. In cabin 10, she sees a woman, to whom she apologises before making a hasty exit. But that night, someone goes overboard and Lo is convinced it's the woman in cabin 10. The snag is everyone tells her that cabin 10 was never occupied, and there's no sign of the woman she saw.
The solution to the puzzle, when it emerges, is not totally original, but that's fine - true originality is vanishingly rare. The way the story is presented works well. Of course, some suspension of disbelief is required. But I enjoyed this one.