When Aurelia Hart boards The Caribbean Dream with her boyfriend, she believes she’s leaving her past behind. But at sea, the past has a way of resurfacing. Among the wealthy passengers and polished smiles, something dark is already stirring.
When a woman vanishes one stormy night, the ship erupts in whispers. Did she jump? Was she pushed? Has someone made sure she’d never reach shore?
Rosy Delgado, a former criminal analyst with a troubled past, senses the story runs deeper than anyone admits. But with no body, her search for the truth turns to the other passengers.
As TheCaribbean Dream cuts through darkening seas, guilt and obsession collide. Every passenger has something to hide. Every confession hides another lie. And the deeper Rosy digs, the closer she drifts toward the truth — and toward the same deadly edge where the girl was last seen alive…
Because at sea some secrets should never surface, and one confession might sink them all.
An unputdownable psychological thriller set at sea — for fans of Paula Hawkins, Lisa Jewell and Sarah Pearse.
This synopsis completely hooked me… sadly, the story didn’t. A luxury cruise, a missing woman, and secrets at sea should’ve been a slam dunk. The Girl in Cabin 11 has a great setup: a woman disappears during a stormy night aboard The Caribbean Dream, and everyone onboard suddenly becomes a suspect. Add a closed-door setting and plenty of secrets, and I was ready for a twisty ride. Unfortunately, the execution felt uneven. The pacing dragged in places, the tension never fully escalated, and the mystery didn’t pull me in the way I expected. For such a confined, high-stakes setting, I wanted sharper twists and a stronger sense of urgency. Not a bad read, just a meh one for me. If the premise excites you more than fast-paced thrills, this may still be worth a try.
I unfortunately found this book boring until 50% of the way through.
The mundane exploration of the passengers, their lives and the few days at sea were unexciting and did not encourage gripped reading.
The book itself was full of both spelling and grammatical errors which clearly were not noticed before publication- which added to the distraction whilst reading. The writing was fine itself, the plot very obvious from early on.
This book took me a considerable amount of time to read as I just did not enjoy it. 2/5.
I read until the end of chapter three and just couldn't finish this book.
I was interested because I thought if this author is audacious enough to try and ride on the coat tails of Ruth Ware's book 'The Girl In Cabin 10,' then maybe this would be good too!
Like comparing steak and peanuts with Ware's book being steak, of course.
The characters in this book are all cliche and one dimensional, down to the stereotyped, Latino handy man everyone dismisses probably because of his ethnicity and low social status. The cast of characters consists of the romantic couple in a honeymoon phase. The influencer who is superficial, perky, and annoying. The loner who lurks - probably the red herring. The old married couple constantly arguing, etc. Absolutely nothing unique or interesting about any of the opening cast. Dialog was vapid and shallow, giving no depth to the characters or plot.
By the end of chapter 3 the exposition gives us few mysterious lines here and there to denote something might happen soon but nothing does. No plot at all.
We do get tons of bland, lyrical attempts at creating the mood, and setting the scenery of being on a cruise ship. Sights, smells, tons of metaphors to the point that it becomes vague, pointless, and exhausting.
If the author isn't going to tell me what the story is about when I'm 20% of the way into a book, I have no hope of it getting better. Super disappointed in this book!
Idk how it works; copying the book onto Amazon, or whatever, but there were a lot of typos, which was annoying. Felt like she used the same descriptions a billion times throughout the book (idea for a drinking game: take a shot every time she says it smells like metal or oil). I think it was rushed, missing “oomph” and the characters were weak. Felt like all the effort of writing this went into describing being on a ship. It felt very much like it was a beginner’s writing. There weren’t small details added in that tie the small/background stuff together and make it more believable/realistic (like they were kept on the ship longer than expected. She could have mentioned accommodations being made for laundry or whatever, just that kind of thing was missing). Overall, it was kind of bland/boring. Not my style.
I found this book very slow, felt like most of the chapters were fillers to stretch out a simple story with an ending which was predictable. I kept reading hoping for a twist which never came.
Predictable plot. Unlikable characters. It discouraged me from ever sailing. Overall it was boring. I skimmed most of it. Also could have used an editor.