![]() Instead of networking and reporting on the luxuries of the cruise liner, Lo becomes obsessed with proving that someone on board has killed the woman in cabin 10. But how could that be, Lo had seen and spoken to the woman earlier that night. Furthermore, all the crew and passengers are accounted for and there was no one checked into the cabin in the first place. It is still empty, but the blood has mysteriously gone. Security staff are alerted and a search of cabin 10 is conducted. But apart from a smear of blood on a door, she finds the cabin empty. Thinking a murder has been committed, she runs to the neighbouring cabin to warn the woman staying there. ![]() The first night aboard, Lo is woken up from her sleep by a scream and the sound of a body being thrown overboard. When she is given a week long assignment aboard a luxury cruise liner making its maiden voyage across the Norwegian fjords, she sees it as an opportunity to put Velocity on the map and boost her career. Laura “Lo” Blacklock is a travel journalist who has worked for Velocity magazine for the past ten years. ![]() How can a person simply vanish while at sea and never be seen again? That is the premise of Ruth Ware’s T he Woman in Cabin 10, or so it seems at first. ![]() There is something fascinating about cruise ship disappearances. ![]()
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