Picture this: you’re alone in a cabin in the woods when suddenly there’s a knock on the door. Is it friend or foe? Do you answer it? Your cozy cabin might no longer seem like a place of refuge. And it for sure won’t if you’re a character in one of these mysteries and thrillers!
A cabin setting is perfectly suited for these thrilling reads. The isolation of a remote place or the power dynamics at a camp means it’s easy to set characters (and readers) on edge. Today’s list is short and sweet but I know there are more mysteries and thrillers with this setting than we included today: I hope you’ll share your favorites in the comments.
And if you want a more meta reading experience, make sure you pack one of these titles for your next cabin getaway.
7 mysteries and thrillers set in a cabin
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The Good Girl
The Travelers
The Brutal Telling: Chief Inspector Gamache Novel #5
Bearskin: A Novel
Don’t Look for Me
The Last Ranger
The God of the Woods
What are your favorite mysteries and thrillers set in a cabin? Please share in the comments.
P.S. 20 riveting wilderness mystery and suspense novels and 20 unputdownable mysteries and thrillers to keep you glued to the page.
















14 comments
My favorite is These Silent Woods by Kimi Cunningham Grant.
I agree! These Silent Woods by Kimi Cunningham Grant is my favorite in this category.
Came here to say the same thing!
I agree. Loved it!
The Brutal Telling was my first Louise Penny read. I have read all of her books since that time.
The residents of Three Pines and the officers of Le Surete are like old friends.
I feel the same way! I love the Three Pines characters.
I have read all the Louise Penny’s novels and absolutely love them!
The only one that came to mind was Force of Nature, by Jane Harper, the second in the Aaron Falk series. Set in Australia, 5 women hike into the Australian bush to a cabin for a company retreat and only 4 come out. They tell Falk a tale about violence and fear.
Jane Harper’s Force of Nature
I think “The Overnight Guest” (Heather Gudenkauf) fits this category.
Ruth Ware’s In A Dark, Dark Wood
Descent by Tim Johnston
The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul G. Tremblay
Black woods blue sky by eowyn Ivy. About life in a cabin in Alaska, so good.
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