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Book Reviews of A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies

A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies
A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies
Author: Ellen Cooney
ISBN-13: 9781400079438
ISBN-10: 1400079438
Publication Date: 1/23/2007
Pages: 320
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 27

3.2 stars, based on 27 ratings
Publisher: Anchor
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

6 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

jegka avatar reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 162 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 10
The review made this look interesting. It is not. It's like being forced to follow a dithering idle housewife around for a week. And not only have the utter boredom of watching her, but having to listen to her inner thoughts: Do I like this? I don't. I do. I don't. Will I go home to my husband? I will. I won't. I will.

Don't bother reading this. Do. Don't.
reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 81 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
A very different story - great characters, especially the heroine, historically accurate in detail and unexpected. NOT romance or chick lit.
reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 27 more book reviews
I loved the main character of this novel and found her so charming. A terrific fairly light-hearted book!
GainesvilleGirl avatar reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 215 more book reviews
A deliciously sexy, yet sweetly gentile book written in an almost "stream of consciousness" style. Charlotte has been very ill due to a bout with polio, and at the beginning of the story is coming out of it with her leg muscles weak but almost intact. She is a country girl fortunate to be married to a man of great wealth and standing in the Boston area. When she happens to find him in a compromising situation with a comely woman she has never met, she runs away on impulse, to a hotel for ladies, but what a hotel it is! For the first time in her life she experiences real passion and sexual satisfaction with a young gigolo who, along with several other gentlemen are employed by the hotel to service the "gentle ladies" who come there for a break from the reality of their upper class lives. Everything at the hotel is strictly hush-hush of course. Charlotte is agog with it all and has to make a decision as to whether or not she will return to her husband and the oppressed, stuffy, life she has led up to now. I found this novel to be a delight and a wonderful break from the serious stuff I've been reading recently. Just what I needed, not unlike Charlotte herself!
reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 34 more book reviews
Good historical novel
Minehava avatar reviewed A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies on + 819 more book reviews
This review is from: A Private Hotel for Gentle Ladies: A novel (Hardcover)
Former invalid Charlotte Heath runs away from home when she finds her husband with another woman. She seeks and finds refuge in a most unusual hotel in Boston --- a reverse brothel. There she eventually comes to terms with what it is she really wants out of life.

The story begins in the early twentieth century at the Heath estate, which is located near Boston. The Heaths are a wealthy and very-well connected family, and they all reside in one huge compound. Charlotte, who came from an impoverished background, finds this family togetherness stifling at times, especially since her husband Hays often seems to prefer the company of his family over spending time alone with her. Hays is very controlling and is always watching Charlotte as though he doesn't quite approve of her. Charlotte continually feels that she doesn't measure up to the Heaths' expectations.

Then Charlotte contracts polio and is quickly and conveniently whisked away, out of sight, to a sickroom that further isolates her from Hays, the Heaths, and the outside world. She spends most of a year bedridden. During that long confinement Charlotte learns to be very still and wait, though she is uncertain just what it is she expects to occur. Mostly, she imagines what might be going on in the outside world. She has a rather peculiar imagination and often imagines events from two completely different perspectives as though she can't really make up her mind which one might be correct.

Once she has recuperated from nearly a year in her sickbed, she is out one brisk, snowy day with her buggy and favorite team of horses. She accidentally spots Hays across the street having a rather intimate, stolen moment with a strange woman. Charlotte is bewildered and upset. Determined not to return to the confines of the Heath estate or to her husband, whom she believes has betrayed her, she literally runs away to a hotel in Boston she had heard of from the family cook who sometimes worked there. Charlotte knew the name of the hotel but not its secrets.

The Beechmont is a classy Boston hotel with a definite aura of secrecy about it. The staff is sworn to silence so the guests can enjoy their much-sought after privacy. Besides the maids and a rather eccentric doorman, most of the rest of the "staff" are handsome young men who entertain the Beechmont guests according to the whims and pleasures of those guests.

Charlotte becomes acquainted with a few of the hotel residents and is quite surprised that the doctor, Hays's aunt, who treated Charlotte during her period of confinement, is actually a regular guest at the Beechmont. Aunt Lily promises to keep Charlotte's whereabouts a secret. Charlotte meets a few of the "staff" and comes to know one of the young men, a medical student who is working his way through college at The Beechmont, rather intimately. She also gets involved in the personal lives of some of the peculiar occupants of the hotel.

There is a detective-type outside, across the street, watching the hotel and the comings and goings of its staff and occupants. The detective, Dickie, is someone Charlotte previously knew. Dickie is now in the employ of Boston Society for the Suppression & Prevention of Vice. The members of the Society know there's something odd going on inside The Beechmont, but proving it is an altogether different matter.

The early twentieth-century setting of a very proper-seeming Boston hotel provides the perfect stage for this story to play out. Charlotte's many musings and deliberations will keep the reader guessing just how this most unusual tale will end.