The Glass Hotel

A novel

audio cd

Published March 24, 2020 by Random House Audio.

ISBN:
978-0-525-59667-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

(103 reviews)

14 editions

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

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 …

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

I really, really enjoyed Station Eleven. I was a little hesitant to pick this one up because of the disappointed reviews I kept seeing and hearing, but I'll honestly say without a trace of doubt that I'm glad I read it. It's told nonsequentially, much like Station Eleven, which will give you that same feeling of having to piece together a puzzle. It also involves a world-ending event, albeit on a smaller, personal, financial sense than a global, everyone, pandemic sense, which was satisfying to piece together.

Unfortunately the underlying themes of The Glass Hotel were less interesting to me than the themes of Station Eleven. Financial drama just doesn't get the same imagination cells firing for me as "survival is insufficient" from Station Eleven. I also didn't really like any of the characters from The Glass Hotel, because it's hard to feel connected with a Ponzi …

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'GoodReads'

Vincent's story is so beautiful and so tragic. Her whole life was borrowed and stolen.



## Why I Picked It Up ##



It was a very convenient combination of being on the Best Fiction Of 2020 and also Available Now at my library. Also I always felt kind of guilty for some reason for not getting into Station Eleven, so I wanted to give the author a second chance.



## What I Want To Remember ##



The way Vincent and other moved through different landscapes. The Country of Money. The Shadow Country. The Other World. The World of Sea and the World of Land. The Shipping World. So many different hidden worlds. It really took the idea of Two Americas and exploded it into Many Americas and followed through on the idea.



I liked the non-linear bits of it and how all the characters crossed through each others lives, sometimes …

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

This will not be everyone's kind of book, but it's definitely mine. There isn't a name for my preferred genre, but it's good writing + characters that subtly reveal their relationships to each other over time + a dark sort of backdrop + a hint of mystery without an actual mystery. This book reminded me of Night Film by Marisha Pessl, but with a ponzi scheme at its core instead of a film.

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

Not what I hoped for (I loved Station Eleven and wanted more), but still a compelling read, although it drags on a bit towards the end, wanting to wrap up the story of every one of the many characters.

The story felt poignant to me, because I spent some time in the company of people who were running a very similar scheme. "It’s possible to both know and not know something", absolutely. I also spent a lot of time in my youth in BC, and some time in Toronto, so those locations felt very real.

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'Goodreads'

If I promised you a book about Ponzi schemes and ghosts and murder mysteries; about the little things that happen to us in a life that haunt us forever, you'd be psyched, right? You'd think: this book could not possibly be boring. And similarly: I see what St. John Mandel is doing here. I respect what she's trying to do. I love the idea of exploring the things that haunt us throughout our lives; the themes we cannot help but return to. I like the idea of personifying that with magical realism ghosts and graffiti that is disturbing out of proportion to the real world. There's a lot of potential here.

But it's SO boring. Unbelievably boring. Is it me? I can't tell. But all of these characters are so flat, I couldn't care about them at all. I found small snippets I liked: the themes, the descriptions of shipping. …

Review of 'The Glass Hotel' on 'GoodReads'

Depressing at times, but beautiful overall. Similar feeling to Station Eleven, in that way, come to think of it...

Funny snippet I really liked from the book:


Practically speaking, flying economy from Toronto to Edinburgh meant that he'd been awake for two days, which fell into that increasingly vast category of things that were doable when he was eighteen but less so as he slid into middle age.

-- page 283

avatar for asmaloney

rated it

avatar for lazcorp

rated it

avatar for AudientVoid

rated it

avatar for unclepork

rated it

avatar for DustinMacDonald

rated it

avatar for WorzelFG

rated it

avatar for daylightgambler@ramblingreaders.org

rated it

avatar for steinea

rated it

avatar for rainbowreckoner

rated it

avatar for rainbowreckoner

rated it

avatar for 40below

rated it

avatar for bbbhltz

rated it

avatar for katinalynn

rated it

avatar for ckochx

rated it

avatar for angelicfae

rated it

avatar for damefolledechat

rated it

avatar for I.P.Freely

rated it

avatar for ianbishop

rated it

avatar for xavierroy

rated it

avatar for jumpinggrendel

rated it

avatar for kataract

rated it

avatar for kevinpotts

rated it

avatar for ScottSchlueter

rated it

avatar for ItsGeorgie

rated it

avatar for Owlislost

rated it

avatar for awboonstra

rated it

avatar for stinkingpig

rated it

avatar for MandolinDan

rated it

avatar for ish-i-ness

rated it

avatar for Satch

rated it

avatar for xianny

rated it

avatar for johnke

rated it

avatar for mpmurawski

rated it

avatar for runkefer

rated it

avatar for tealtorch

rated it

avatar for cerieshunter

rated it

avatar for nightgolfer

rated it

avatar for boomboxnation

rated it

avatar for slowline

rated it

avatar for aimeekgunther

rated it

avatar for philiporange

rated it

avatar for mivade

rated it

avatar for elementaryflimflam

rated it

avatar for robhedges

rated it

avatar for rlittleton

rated it

avatar for recri

rated it

avatar for schellenberg

rated it

avatar for shawn

rated it

avatar for biblio_creep

rated it

avatar for Archbishop

rated it

avatar for HunterHeading

rated it

avatar for pgenera

rated it

avatar for billybooknews

rated it

avatar for joergr

rated it

avatar for hadaly

rated it

avatar for Se3wall

rated it

avatar for JudgeR

rated it

avatar for crb

rated it

avatar for appel

rated it

avatar for tamcymru

rated it

avatar for Coleysscrollies

rated it

avatar for notalocal

rated it

avatar for theslowinternet

rated it

avatar for JanWillemSwane

rated it

avatar for gfontenot

rated it

avatar for datwizzerd

rated it

avatar for appel

rated it

avatar for froderik

rated it

avatar for chrisw_b

rated it

avatar for armamix@books.infosec.exchange

rated it

avatar for cjhubbs

rated it

avatar for 3ivin6@books.babb.no

rated it