July 24, 2020
Queenie
Malone’s Paradise Hotel by Ruth Hogan
Tilda and her
mother Grace were never close. Tilda always
suspected it was because she inherited an ability to see the dead from her
father, a trait that her mother detested.
After her father’s death, the best thing to happen to Tilda was moving
into Queenie Malone’s Paradise Hotel in Brighton, where Tilda found a second
mother in Queenie and a family in the quirky group of employees and guests at
the hotel. But shortly after their move,
Grace inexplicably shipped Tilda off to a remote boarding school, wrenching her
away from the only real home she had ever known. After Grace’s death over 40 years later, Tilda
fears that she has inherited not only her father’s psychic ability, but also
her mother’s mental illness. She is
desperate for answers, and with her faithful canine companion Eli by her side, Tilda
returns to Brighton to search for answers about their lives, why her mother always
seemed to be punishing her, and what really happened to her father.
My sciatica
was acting up yesterday, so I spent most of the day lying down on a heating pad,
reading. I was fortunate to have Queenie
Malone’s Paradise Hotel checked out from the library. I fell in love with Queenie and her hotel at
the first description. Brighton in the 1970’s
sounds like a child’s paradise. There is
a slight supernatural element in Tilda’s ability to see those who are no longer
living – she can’t always distinguish between the living
and the dead. Things aren’t always the
way you think they are (especially when you’re a child) and the plotline has a number of unexpected developments.
But children also accept some things without question, while adults
might be put off or make judgments.
Eli the dog
is a wonderful character, and yes, he is fine and living with Tilda at the end
of the book. Queenie also is a marvelous flamboyant character, but she makes only sporadic appearances until the middle of the
book.
Although the
story has a dark side and there are complex issues here, I found Queenie
Malone’s Paradise Hotel to be a delightful and engaging read. I finished the novel in a day, and I highly
recommend it if you enjoy quirky fiction.
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