


It's rather small with only 10 cabins, a maximum of 20 passengers, and a handpicked staff on board. The Aurora is a brand new super-luxury cruise liner that will travel around the Norwegian fjords for it's maiden voyage. This could be her way of finally getting that promotion if Lo can just keep it together enough to network among important people and help put their small travel magazine, Velocity, on the map. But she still has to go on this week long luxury cruise assignment for work since her boss is on maternity leave. She got in a huge fight with her boyfriend. When a break-in occurs in her apartment with her present, it brings her fear and anxiety to a whole new high. Laura Blacklock (she goes by Lo) suffers from extreme anxiety to the point of needing medicine to keep it under control. I guess I'll delve into the plot a tiny bit to get my point across while still avoiding spoilers. It felt like the author just replaced a few facts with similar enough things.changed the train into a luxury cruise liner. Usually even with all the similarities of thrillers these days, I can find enough originality in the story to feel the author didn't *try* to follow the same formula.

It also felt like a not as good carbon copy of The Girl on the Train. I found I was expected to suspend my disbelief even more in The Woman in Cabin 10 and I wasn't having any of it. I enjoyed Ruth Ware's debut a lot more than this one.
