By
Margaret S. Hamilton
Twenty-five-year-old Molly
Gray resides in an unidentified city, probably in Canada, where author Nita
Prose lives, and works as a hotel maid. Since her grandmother’s recent death,
she lives alone and has no friends. Clad in her immaculate white uniform shirt
and black pencil skirt, washed and pressed daily by the hotel laundry, she is
invisible to others, a cleaner lugging her cart on and off the hotel elevators:
I am your maid. I’m the one who cleans your hotel room, who enters like
a phantom when you’re out gallivanting for the day, no care at all about what
you’ve left behind, the mess, or what I might see when you’re gone. I’m the one
who empties your trash, tossing out the receipts you don’t want anyone to
discover. I’m the one who changes your sheets, who can tell if you slept in
them and if you were alone last night. I’m the one who straightens your shoes
by the door, who puffs up your pillows and finds stray hairs on them. Yours?
Not likely. (p.6)
Molly is neurodivergent,
obsessive about her cleaning, and a slave to etiquette. She is quiet and
conscientious, the ideal hotel employee—until she finds a wealthy hotel patron,
Charles Black, dead in his bed. Molly, who is perceived as odd by other
employees, is the perfect suspect. After she is arrested and appears in court
wearing her grandmother’s pajamas printed with teapots, she is released on
bail.
Molly learns she has friends
who want to help her: Mr. Preston, the hotel doorman, and his criminal defense
attorney daughter, Charlotte; and Juan Manual, a hotel dishwasher. Rodney, the
hotel bartender, is involved with nefarious doings at the hotel, possibly
related to Mr. Black’s untimely demise. A trap is set and the real culprit in
Mr. Black’s death is identified and charged. But only Molly knows the whole
truth about what happened in Mr. Black’s hotel suite that fateful morning.
Nita Prose’s writing is
lucid and precise, flowing seamlessly between past and present. Molly’s gran
taught her to use quirky British terms and aphorisms. Molly is plucky, a
heroine from a past age, who, by the end of the book, becomes her own woman.
She receives a promotion at the hotel and plans to continue working toward her
university degree in hotel management.
Though Molly is an appealing
neurodivergent character, she lacks the sass and bite of Gail Honeyman’s
Eleanor Oliphant. Eleanor is older, better educated, and more independent than
Molly. I find Eleanor compelling, but she does lack Molly’s charming naivete.
Nita Prose delivers a good
overview of the life of a hotel maid—the procedures and cleaning supplies,
interactions with hotel guests, and the all-important monetary tips they leave.
However, after spending a summer working as a motel maid, I know that a single
cleaner can only clean one room every half hour (bathroom, fresh sheets and
towels, thorough vacuuming and dusting), or eight rooms a day. Molly’s workload is unrealistic.
Readers and writers, have
you ever worked at a hotel? How would you set a “Clue” style murder mystery in
a hotel or in an “Only Murders in the Building” style plot?
I have fortunately never worked in a hotel. I have always had great respect for those who do because I’ve listened to their stories. Not sure if the story needs to be Clue though – there is always the opportunity for an odd man out in a hotel!
ReplyDeleteI found your write up compelling. Might have to read this book. I set one of my books in a hotel. No, I never worked in one, but I interviewed the security manager, who had been a county sheriff in Michigan before retiring to Naples, FL. It was a great place to stage a murder!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this book, especially the last revelation.
ReplyDeleteDare I say "Some of my best friends" have been hotel workers, including housekeepers. But not me.
ReplyDeleteI don't think everybody is as unaware of housekeepers as seems to be the case here. However, I don't have much experience in top-notch hotels, so perhaps it is different there.
This does sound like something I'd like to read.
I'm halfway through the Maid and so far haven't been blown away. Looking forward to curling up and finishing.
ReplyDeleteI was a waitress in a hotel restaurant - I loved the Sunday brunches. Less work and bigger tips!
I liked the book, but it doesn't stand up to Eleanor Oliphant, for sure! I found myself getting impatient with Molly--and then, feeling bad because of it. I have no experience as a maid, and I'm not sure, after reading the book that I do now.
ReplyDeleteI see everybody reading this book. It's on my TBR list. I like the idea of a neurodivergent character and the upscale hotel setting.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to reading this book. Thanks for your review.
ReplyDeleteKait, I agree a good hotel murder can go in so many directions.
ReplyDeleteElaine, I hope you enjoy it.
Marilyn, I liked the book, but Molly didn't click with me.
Kathleen, I'm curious to learn if you like the book.
Shari, I hope you like the ending! I agree, Sunday brunch is a great shift to work.
Shari H, I agree that Eleanor Oliphant is a nuanced and unforgettable character.
Korina and Debra, enjoy! It's a fun read.
Forgot to mention that Universal is making a movie based on the book.