Helpless by Jessica Knoll

Helpless by Jessica Knoll

Jessica Knoll's fourth novel turns a locked cabin into a hall of mirrors

Helpless by Jessica Knoll follows Hollywood producer Faye Heron, who is drugged and taken to a remote cabin by Henry, her college first love. Sharp, sexy, and unsettling, this psychological thriller probes power, memory, and desire, then detonates a divisive, mind-bending ending. Bold and propulsive, though its cold cast and explicit heat will not suit every reader.
  • Publisher: Scribner
  • Genre: Mystery, Horror, Psychological Thriller
  • First Publication: 2026
  • Language: English

Some thrillers open with a corpse. This one opens with a funeral, a hotel minibar, and the specific dread of being seen by the person who knew you before you became somebody. Helpless by Jessica Knoll drops us beside Faye Heron, a Hollywood writer-director-actress whose life photographs beautifully from the outside, at the precise moment her past strolls back into the room wearing the face of Henry Spalding, her college boyfriend and first ruinous love. Twelve years ago she left him. She also, less forgivably, spun their breakup into an award-winning episode of prestige television that cast him as the villain. Now a beloved professor has died, the old crowd has gathered on campus, and Henry arrives with an apology that sounds less like contrition than an incantation.

Then he drugs her and drives her to a remote cabin. The book’s own jacket copy tells you this much, so I feel no guilt repeating it.

The Voice Is the Weapon

If you have read Knoll before, you know her sentences have teeth. Faye narrates in a register that is vain, funny, self-lacerating, and unnervingly observant, the voice of a woman who has built a career out of her worst instincts and refuses to apologize for it. She clocks the crooked stitching on a rival’s trousers. She weighs private grief against professional ambition and watches ambition win. That candor is the engine of the whole book. You will not always like Faye, and the author plainly knows it, and the discomfort is the design rather than an accident.

Knoll earned this voice the hard way. A former senior editor at Cosmopolitan and articles editor at Self, she broke out with Luckiest Girl Alive in 2015, adapted it herself for the 2022 Netflix film starring Mila Kunis, then delivered The Favorite Sister and the acclaimed Bright Young Women. Her fourth novel sharpens the same blade she has been honing across all of them: the story of a woman trapped inside somebody else’s version of events, fighting to seize the pen.

Structure, Suspense, and the Slow Squeeze

The cabin section is where Helpless by Jessica Knoll earns its comparison to Misery, except the tormentor is not a stranger with a sledgehammer. He is the man who once bent at the knees just to hear her cry. The captivity chapters run on a cruel countdown logic, and Knoll doles out the balance of power in tiny, shifting increments, so you are never certain who holds the leash on any given page. Is this punishment? Performance? Reunion? The novel keeps all three plates spinning.

Beneath the sex and the suspense runs a genuine mystery, one that reaches back years and quietly rewrites what Faye believes about the people she trusted most. I will say nothing about the ending except that it is bold, divisive by design, and built to reroute your understanding of everything that came before. Some readers will find it dazzling. Some will feel outmaneuvered. Almost no one will shrug.

Here is what the author gets right:

  1. A narrator you cannot trust and cannot quit. Faye is magnetic precisely because she is unreliable, and the book wields that instability as a weapon rather than a gimmick.
  2. Prose that moves. The pages crackle. Chapters close on hooks that feel earned, not cheap.
  3. A serious interest in desire. Knoll writes appetite, power, and submission without flinching and without moralizing, which is rarer than it should be.
  4. A setting with atmosphere. The Finger Lakes cabin, the private island, the cold water and colder people supply real menace.
  5. An ending with ambition. Whether or not it lands for you, it swings for something large.

Where the Book Wobbles

This book is not a flawless one, and honesty demands the other side of the ledger. Helpless by Jessica Knoll asks a great deal of its reader, and it will lose a few of them along the way.

  • Everyone is hard to love. Faye, Henry, and the supporting cast are calculating, cold, or both. If you need a character to root for, you may spend long stretches adrift.
  • The middle can feel airless. The claustrophobia is intentional, but the push and pull of the captivity occasionally circles the same emotional ground before the plot lurches forward.
  • The mystery rides in the backseat. The central question of who did what to whom often cedes the spotlight to the Faye-and-Henry dynamic, which may frustrate anyone who came for a straight whodunit.
  • The final act arrives fast. After such a patient buildup, the resolution moves at a sprint, and some readers will wish the last stretch had more room to breathe.
  • The heat is explicit. The erotic content is central, not decorative. That is a draw for its target audience and a wall for anyone hoping to pass this to their aunt.

None of these sink the book. They simply mark the difference between admiring a thriller and surrendering to it completely.

The Bigger Idea Underneath

What lifts Helpless by Jessica Knoll above standard captivity fare is its argument about authorship. Faye made her name by taking a private wound and selling it as a story. The novel keeps circling back to who owns a shared history, who gets to narrate it, and what it costs to be the loudest voice in the room. It is a thriller about power, yes, but specifically the power to decide which version of the truth survives. That thematic spine is why the book lingers after the last twist has sprung.

Who Should Read It

Reach for this one if you want:

  • A thriller that treats female desire as complicated rather than shameful.
  • An unreliable narrator in the bloodline of Gone Girl.
  • A single-sitting read with an ending engineered for arguments.

Give it a pass if graphic content is a dealbreaker, or if you need at least one clean hero to hold onto.

If You Loved It, Read These Next

  • Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn for the definitive marriage-as-battlefield thriller and its ice-cold narrator.
  • Misery by Stephen King for the cabin-captivity blueprint that reviewers keep invoking here.
  • Verity by Colleen Hoover for another dark, meta story about a manuscript that may be lying to you.
  • My Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell for a searching look at power, memory, and consent.
  • The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave for propulsive suspense about a woman untangling a partner’s secrets.
  • Knoll’s own Bright Young Women and Luckiest Girl Alive for more of her signature scalpel-sharp heroines.

Final Word

Helpless by Jessica Knoll is a lot of book packed into a slim frame: sexy, mean, clever, and calibrated to split the dinner table down the middle. It does not court your affection so much as your attention, and it takes it by force. The flaws are real, and so is the nerve. This is a thriller written by someone who would rather risk everything on a wild ending than play it safe, and that gamble is precisely why it will be one of the most talked-about reads of the year.

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  • Publisher: Scribner
  • Genre: Mystery, Horror, Psychological Thriller
  • First Publication: 2026
  • Language: English

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Helpless by Jessica Knoll follows Hollywood producer Faye Heron, who is drugged and taken to a remote cabin by Henry, her college first love. Sharp, sexy, and unsettling, this psychological thriller probes power, memory, and desire, then detonates a divisive, mind-bending ending. Bold and propulsive, though its cold cast and explicit heat will not suit every reader.Helpless by Jessica Knoll