Rachel Wolf's Reading List
Rachel Wolf is a British thriller writer. Before transitioning to a writing career, she worked for a holiday company, gaining extensive travel experience that serves as inspiration for her novels. The thriller Five Nights draws from her travels, offering readers a glimpse into the world of luxury cruise ships and super-rich characters.
Open in WellRead Daily app →The Best Thrillers Set in Luxury Locations (2024)
Scraped from fivebooks.com (2024-02-29).
Source: fivebooks.com
Catherine Cooper · Buy on Amazon
"The Chalet is all luxury and all secrets. We have our main protagonist, and we also have other points of view, which I always like. You dip in behind the scenes, see what’s happened before, hear other character’s opinions, and feel privy to just the right amount of secrets at just the right time. There’s a very big, dramatic finish and everything comes to a head. I find it very hard not to give the plot away too much…But I just loved it. It was very different. I raced through it. I’ve subsequently read her book The Chateau and she’s also written a novel set on a cruise ship called The Cruise . It came out after I’d written mine and I messaged her to say, ‘I’m really sorry. I’ve also written a book set on a cruise ship.’ She said not to worry as when The Chalet came out, Ruth Ware had also just written one set in a ski chalet, One by One . There is obviously some kind of collective movement towards this kind of thing! The Chalet was the first novel I read by Catherine Cooper, but I’ve loved all of them. It’s very hard to write a book that feels easy and quick to read. So many people think of it as a simple genre, but it’s actually very difficult to put something together that is easily accessible and well plotted. You feel like you’re being whipped through this mysterious world loaded with secrets where everyone is wearing a fabulous outfit. Her novels are gripping and a really good read."
Sarah Pearse · Buy on Amazon
"It’s a similar setup, but it’s a darker book. The sanatorium location was once an actual sanatorium. It’s now a beautiful luxury resort, but given the name, and the history of it, there are some darker secrets hiding. Again, those come to light. What I really liked about The Sanatorium was that locked room, isolated setting — in a hotel that nobody can reach. Something terrible happens. There’s an awful storm. Everybody’s locked in the resort. And we have our protagonist who has a window of time to unearth the answers to some questions before even more terrible things happen. I love the landscape as well. Catherine Cooper’s books I’ve mentioned are set in beautiful, scenic French countryside. With The Sanatorium it’s bleak and dark. Whilst it’s beautiful, there’s an edge to it. It’s not just a luxurious retreat. It’s really cold. You feel that if you stepped outside, terrible things would happen if you stayed there too long. It doesn’t have that holiday resort feel. Yes, absolutely, I love that. There are actual locked room mysteries — like some by Agatha Christie where the body is found in a room , but the room is locked from the inside and nobody could have got in or out. But sometimes when we say ‘locked room’ what we really mean is a very closed environment where somebody in the party must be guilty of the murder. In The Sanatorium , you have a group of suspects and various kinds of secrets come into play. In one chapter, you suspect one person; in another, you suspect somebody else. It’s just brilliant. You unearth individual histories and backstories. I like that feeling of being suspended and held and then surprised. It’s a real pleasure to be taken along and guess the real murderer, feeling like you’re your own Hercule Poirot or Miss Marple. I’ve gone for the loose locked room feel, so there isn’t a body in a room with the key locked inside. It is on a ship of 3000 — a hugely glamorous luxury liner. However, I’ve got a very small cast, and because of their VIP status, they have access to parts of the ship that nobody else does. My protagonist is meeting her friend whom she hasn’t spoken to for three years for reasons that come to light during the novel. Her friend has married a billionaire who owns the cruise liner and it’s on its inaugural cruise. They’re on the most luxurious ship with very rich people, and yet when terrible things begin to happen, it begins to feel claustrophobic. There are some very claustrophobic settings which act like locked rooms. For example, I have a scene where something terrible happens when they’re all shut in a karaoke booth — one of them in the booth is responsible for a crime, but which one? I really enjoyed writing it. It was such a blast. I call it a cruise because it’s nice and easy but technically it’s a crossing — because the ship sails out of Portsmouth Harbour and goes to New York. The inaugural cruise is five nights and six days—from Portsmouth to New York—and that’s when everything happens. We do have a very brief spell in New York and a brief spell at Portsmouth before we set off, but it all happens aboard the ship. It’s isolated. There may or may not be a storm at some point. There is another voice in the novel from three years earlier – her scenes don’t take place on the ship."
Lucy Foley · Buy on Amazon
"I was deliberating which Lucy Foley to choose because I’ve gone for very classic kind of locked room, small cast thrillers with my other choices. The Guest List is an obvious choice by Lucy, and so well known, but I decided to go for one of her earlier novels, The Invitation . The Invitation is slightly different. There’s a bit of Sleeping with the Enemy in there , the film with Julia Roberts. A haunting, unsettling vibe. It’s very glamorous, and I love the location. Lucy’s such a beautiful writer. When you read her chapters, you’re suspended in Rome or in Cannes, at one point. Then later you’re on a beautiful yacht in the middle of the sea."
Lucy Foley · Buy on Amazon
"It’s too hard to say. The Guest List and The Hunting Party are so different. They’re both what I think of now as commercial thrillers — with love-to-hate characters. The Invitation feels more like a love story as well as a mystery. It’s not really a thriller in the same way. The Invitation I liked because of Rome, because of the parties, and the history that adds glamour to it as well. Anything set a few decades earlier is a different kind of travel — in the same way that going to a luxury resort takes you out of yourself."
Ellery Lloyd · Buy on Amazon
"In the novel, there’s something called ‘The Home.’ It’s a bit like Soho House, a members’ club. Everyone who is a member seems to be a TV star or a film director, and it’s all very, very glamorous. The owner of The Home, Ned, has stepped up even for him, and has now bought an island. I love the feeling that everything has been raised a notch — every scenario is brighter and more vivid, and the characters are under more tension. It’s the big opening night to this new ‘Island Home.’ Everything’s riding on it and everyone wants an invitation. People are trying to sneak in or bribe their way in. But of course there are secrets lurking in the background, and Ned goes missing. At this point, I have to stop talking about the plot or I’ll give too much away. By the time Ned goes missing, we have a whole array of characters who hate him. Is he dead or isn’t he? If he is, what’s happened to him and who’s done it? Again, it’s all set against a beautiful backdrop. The book describes, at one point, about being able to have a bath and look out the window and nobody can see you. There’s a feeling of privacy, seclusion and luxury. There’s even an underwater restaurant in the book, which is brilliant. However, nothing is as it seems. It’s a great book. I really raced through it. I loved it. Yes, they do have a residents’ meeting in the novel, where one of the members from The Home has to go and defend the building of a new club on the island. There’s a brick thrown through the window and all the local residents are up in arms."
Sarah Goodwin · Buy on Amazon
"A yacht is a smaller vessel whereas a cruise ship can be massive. In January, the biggest cruise ship ever was launched and sailed out of Florida. It can hold up to 10,000 people and has seven swimming pools and a water park. It’s just unbelievable. In this book, there are only six people on the yacht. I don’t know how much to give away! They plan to have a New Year’s party on deck in the harbor. There’s a helicopter on the yacht. They’ve got outside heaters and music going. There are lights, there are canapes and so much champagne, it’s untrue. It’s about three friends who have been close for years but are no longer friends in the same way. Two of them are rich, but one of them is not rich at all. There is tension between them. Some dreadful husbands are thrown into the pot as well. There are arguments and our protagonist—the poorer one of the group—decides to leave after the party in the morning. But she discovers a terrible secret about their situation, and they end up isolated and at sea. It’s a bit like Lord of the Flies . They’re locked in the middle of the sea with no food and no water, and they turn on each other. I don’t think I liked any of them — but I kind of loved them all, if that makes sense. I loved to hate them. It was like dominoes: one would do something terrible and then somebody else would do something even worse. It was very tense. It had everything. It had isolation, a small group, a locked room feel in that there was a small space with only a certain number of guests. It had jealousy. And it had extreme wealth. I was obsessed with it when I was reading. I couldn’t put it down. The book is supposed to be a thrilling, hooky read, the kind that keeps you guessing, but I wanted there to be some element of depth to the characters. One of my characters has been quite changed. I needed an event that bridged who she was to where she is now. She was taken hostage — kidnapped and held for ransom. I wanted to get her story right. I spoke to Hostage International, this amazing charity that do incredible work and they recommended some books that had been written by people who had been held hostage. I wanted to understand how others had been changed by such an experience. So even though it’s not given a vast amount of page space, I hope it’s a valid account of how somebody may change when something so huge happens to them. I also went on two cruises. I mentioned the one I went on straight after lockdown. I also managed to go on another one with a couple of friends and really discovered what isolation was like, because I caught COVID. I ended up on the medical deck. I couldn’t leave, I wasn’t even allowed to call room service to order a coffee. They had to bring set meals, and the medical staff would come along in a full hazmat suit, to deliver food, take my temperature, etc. every morning. I spent 48 hours isolated in the medical unit, and then I was ushered off the ship and a friend drove me home. So I felt that I really experienced isolation on the ship as well as enjoying the luxurious parts of it. Obviously, I saw the medical unit for myself, but the captain also gave us a tour of the bridge and talked me through the security measures. He told me how they would hold somebody they suspected of a crime, and what they would do in an emergency and if a body was to be found; also what the procedure is if somebody falls overboard. I felt confident I covered the research carefully. Hopefully it stands the test. Oh my god yes! As I was saying earlier, I love to hate the characters. You love to watch their downfall because you don’t find them very appealing or they’re slightly repellent. It’s really good watching them tip all the way down. The Scarmardos are awful. The dad enjoys his role as head of the family. He’s quite old-fashioned. He has that whole Italian machismo thing, ‘I am the man and my authority is key.’ I love all of that in him and he has it in spades. He has ruled his family with an iron fist and now, when they try to rebel, he’s got all the money so they can’t push back too far because they don’t want to be cut off. When he marries somebody who is younger than his eldest son, they all go mad with worry about their inheritance, but they can’t seem to be too angry because he demonstrates he will cut back on their allowances. They’ve got to knuckle down and any kind of hatred or anger they feel comes out through secrets, through actions they can’t be very public about. It was a lot of fun to write. I have two friends who have grown up next door to each other. They’re from a not-very-rich background — both their families worked at the local factory. They grow up having ice lollies on the back lawn, stealing their mother’s lipstick and having sleepovers on a Friday night. They watch richer people go skiing and decide to go to university together and change their lives. Then, when they finish university, they go traveling, and they crew on luxury yachts. That is how one of them is taken, and held hostage. It’s also how they suddenly have access to all of this finery in life that they’ve never experienced before. And so ultimately, after this terrible thing occurs, one of them ends up marrying a billionaire and the other one goes back home to lick her wounds. They haven’t spoken for three years — for reasons that will be unearthed in the novel… ‘Five Nights’ by Rachel Wolf is published by Head of Zeus at £9.99 as a paperback original today (29 February, 2024)"