Reviewed by Jeanne
Manhattan, the early 1960s:
the Biedermeier Hotel is home to a number of women of various ages, from
the young and eager to the elderly and infirm.
All are just scraping by, so for some the Christmas season offers an opportunity
to earn much needed extra money. Most are content to pick up extra jobs as
window dressers or sales clerks.
Lucianne has a better idea:
she’ll start a service providing male escorts for young women who want
to attend various functions but who don’t want to go alone. She knows several young men who can be
trusted to behave like gentlemen and who will cut a respectable figure. Of
course, Lucianne will get a cut of the fee. . . .
Katherine, the first floor manager, has been estranged from
her family for years but is cautiously hopeful when she receives a letter from
a younger sister. It’s the first time
anyone from the family has reached out.
And then there’s Josephine, a retiree whose methods of picking
up some extra cash are definitely not legal.
Author Daniel Lavery uses his characters from The Women’s
Hotel to good effect in this holiday novella. While it can be read as a standalone, Christmas
at the Women’s Hotel would be better appreciated if one had read the first
novel. I had not, so I admit I was a bit
overwhelmed with all the characters.
What kept me reading was the writing: I love the author’s sense of humor
and way that he phrases things. Of Lucianne,
who is from a socially prominent family, he writes, “She was not self-conscious
about her age, but she was certainly aware that it could no longer benefit her
socially, though it had not as yet begun to count against her.” Of another
character he writes that she was “thought of as something better than a
nuisance but less than a friend.”
He also makes the 1964 time period come alive, which I really
enjoyed. I liked that not all the problems
were solved or that some resolutions were not what I would have hoped. Perhaps those endings are for another book. It
felt realistically festive instead of saccharine.
If you’re looking for some nostalgia reading set in the Big
Apple, this can be an entertaining choice.
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