Glass Hotel

A Novel

No cover

Emily St. John Mandel: Glass Hotel (2020, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

320 pages

English language

Published July 10, 2020 by Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-0-525-52115-0
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4 stars (91 reviews)

14 editions

A sprawling exploration of delusional characters

3 stars

Content warning Set against 'Station Eleven', slight spoilers for both ahead

This book infuriated me but i still finished it.

2 stars

Content warning maybe spoilers or not but just in case

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

In a lot of ways, this book almost felt like a test run for Station Eleven, which was a book that meticulously constructed to create an engaging story line crafted from carefully woven together narratives. This felt a bit less polished. It certainly wasn't a bad book; quite the opposite. I enjoyed it. I just simply did not care. I didn't care about any of the characters. I didn't care about their connections. The way each character POV was associated with every other character POV felt topical and not well thought out. There were very few moments of "Oh that's an interesting connection that adds additional context to the story." and more moments of "Why do I need this character's perspective on what's happening? What does this add? I don't care about this person."

The only thing that potentially elevates this book is the context of Station Eleven. The knowledge …

Sad, Poignant, Beautiful

5 stars

This book is so beautiful, so insightful, and so sad. This story is a deep-dive into the different worlds that we can often fall into. It's an examination of wealth, poverty, addiction, guilt/shame, stealing to get by, making art for art's sake, making art for ambition's sake, greed, dread, and so many more things.

As someone whose family was significantly impacted by the 2008 financial crisis (and let's be honest, whose wasn't), I found that entering back into the world of watching white collar criminals squirm was like a warm blanket. There are a few scenes in the book where various financial criminals are overtaken by waves of dread and it felt like such a balm to my soul to experience their suffering as a reader and then to remove myself back into the cozy world of my own little reading nook.

The Glass Hotel is not a feel-good book, …

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I read this novel because I recently re-read “Station Eleven” (after watching the series) and was reminded of how much I liked it. However, while this book follows the same formula as Station Eleven — seemingly disconnected characters who are unwittingly linked together — the background setting of Station Eleven (a post-pandemic world where almost everyone is dead) is fascinating enough to keep you reading through the storylines and character arcs that end up going nowhere. In this novel, however, the background setting is mundane: A hotel, Toronto, rich people in New York, etc. As a result, I ended up being much more focused on the fact that almost every plot line and character’s story seems to just peter out. As in SE, some things come together at the end, but getting there, in this novel, is a much less satisfying read.

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I really liked this book, but I have a hard time articulating why. I'm not sure exactly what it was about, but I did enjoy reading it. It was like a stroll through the lives of several unrelated (mostly) people, connected by chance. Something about the world being a small place, and diversifying your investments.

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Vincent swam every night to strengthen her will because she was desperately afraid of drowning.

As I neared the end of the book I tried to imagine how I could summarize it. What is the quick recap that can explain what this is about? Is this a story about a hotel and the lives that are interconnected through a period of time?

Or is the story about the web of people Vincent and Paul interacted with and how they continued to bounce around in that sphere of familiar circles? Or is the Ponzi scheme and financial fallout the focus of the book?

For a book without an immediate identity I enjoyed reading it. Emily St. John Mandel crafts an eerie and almost haunting story. I felt as isolated as the guests in the hotel reading this book. There is a sense of isolation and dread but also beauty in the …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, mystery & detective, general
  • Missing persons, fiction
  • Fiction, psychological

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