St Gregory Hotel is a private establishment
and Warren Trent, also called W.T., is the owner of it. The novel begins with
the introduction to the problems a hotel generally faces .Complaints from guests
regarding some rowdy boys partying too hard and how a harmless party goes out
of hand giving a push towards the roller-coaster ride of the St Gregory mansion.
In the beginning it is clear that
St Gregory Hotel’s ownership is in trouble. The lease of twenty years of the
hotel property was due for redemption and W.T. wasn’t getting any lenders as
the hotel was facing losses. The hotel was going through a gradual death and
where there is death vultures are never far .Hence enters Curtis O’Keefe, hotelier
who ran a chain of hotels all over the world and was now eyeing St Gregory. He
was someone who seldom faced disappointed in his endeavours, was ruthless, practical,
notably devout and was sure of his success. He always had a different starlet accompanying
him being the influential person he was; Miss Lash was the beauty this time. Is
his success as easy and simple as he has thought it to be?
Duke and Duchess of Croydon were
also the residents of this hotel. Duchess was a cool and composed lady who had
a haughty air about her. The Duke was complete opposite. He has seldom sober
and where Duchess was always in control of the situation, Duke seldom knew what
to do. With her calculating nature Duchess tries to avert a disaster putting
whole of her intellect and influence into action. But will she be successful in
hiding the dastardly crime her husband has committed?
Keycase is a hotel thief who robs
the guests staying in hotels and St. Gregory is his place of action this time
round. He uses ingenious methods to avoid detection and to accomplish his miscreant
activities. But he always lives in the threat of a lifelong imprisonment. Will
the vigilant hotel staff catch him and send him to prison for good?
Peter McDermott is the assistant
manager in the hotel. He is a highly principled man with a single black spot in
his career which forbids him to leave the hotel and work in a more righteous
place. He is frustrated due to the lack of power he has and which he knows he won’t
ever get.
This book takes your through the kitchens and
dining halls of an hotel. You will unearth the delusions people live through and
the callousness of the high and mighty. Till what extent influential people can
go, to cover up their crimes and how a petty thief is given a second chance by
fate.
Reading this book you smile and frown and will be pleasantly surprised that how
a seemingly insignificant individual changes the course of life of so many
people.
It’s with amazing skill that Arthur Hailey brings so
many people with varied lifestyles together in one single strike of fate. It holds
the charm of the book To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee) by divulging into racism and how
the principles of one man change the tradition.
It’s not that kind of book which
you can’t put down but it certainly is that kind of book which will make you
read the page twice to make you believe what has just happened. A refreshing book which also gives interesting nuggets and secrets of hotels and how love
happens in the most unusual of places and to the most unsuspecting people.
'You have to weigh what you want against what you believe in'