
Woman of Straw
1964 • Crime, Drama, Thriller • NR
Anthony Richmond schemes to get the fortune of his tyrannical, wheelchair-using tycoon uncle Charles Richmond by persuading Maria, a nurse he employs, to marry him.
Runtime: 2h 2m
Why you should read the novel
Before you press play on the movie, experience Woman of Straw as Catherine Arley originally crafted it. The novel delivers layered psychological suspense, sharper character motives, and a more intimate sense of danger than any screen version can sustain. If you’re drawn to elegant intrigue and morally complex plots, the book is the richest entry point.
Reading the Woman of Straw novel lets you inhabit the heroine’s anxieties and calculations, savoring the slow tightening of the trap with every chapter. Arley’s pacing, atmosphere, and clues reward close attention, making the mystery feel earned rather than simply revealed. It’s a literary thriller you can sink into—perfect for fans of Patricia Highsmith–style tension.
The English edition of Woman of Straw is an accessible gateway to mid-century European crime fiction. Choose the source material to get the full spectrum of motives, hints, and reversals that inspired the film. For book clubs, collectors, and ebook readers alike, starting with the novel ensures you won’t miss the subtleties that make this story unforgettable.
Adaptation differences
One of the biggest differences between the Woman of Straw movie and the book is cultural context. Catherine Arley’s novel, originally published in French, carries a European noir sensibility and a more intimate, claustrophobic mood. The film relocates and reframes the story within glossy British high society, emphasizing opulence, travel, and star charisma over the book’s tighter psychological confinement.
Characterization diverges notably. On screen, the nephew’s charm and the nurse’s glamour are foregrounded, shaping audience sympathy and softening edges to suit a 1960s star vehicle. In the novel, interior perspective and psychological shading make motives feel cooler, more calculating, and more ambiguous, with inner doubts and shifting loyalties that cinema must externalize through dialogue and gesture.
Structure and pacing are streamlined in the adaptation. The film condenses or merges certain secondary roles and simplifies timelines to deliver a clear three-act arc with elegant set pieces. The book unfolds more deliberately, using incremental reveals, misdirection, and internal reflection to build dread—resulting in additional beats and nuances that don’t fit the movie’s runtime and tonal polish.
Tone and thematic emphasis also shift. The novel leans harder into moral ambiguity, social cynicism, and the psychology of dependency and manipulation. The movie accentuates romance, glamour, and visual suspense—yachts, mansions, and couture—trading some of the book’s sharper edges for accessible tension. Readers will notice a darker, more ironic flavor in the source material compared with the film’s sleek, audience-friendly finish.
Woman of Straw inspired from
Woman of Straw
by Catherine Arley