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Winter at Death's Hotel: A Novel

von Kenneth Cameron

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726374,535 (3.65)2
Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. Historical Fiction. HTML:

"Part historical fiction, part psychological thriller, Cameron's work is all page-turner."-Library Journal, STARRED Review

Sherlock has nothing on this woman ? in 1890s New York, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's wife hunts down a serial killer...

New York, January 1896. Arthur Conan Doyle, the renowned created of Sherlock Holmes, arrives with his wife Louisa at the Britannic Hotel in New York for his first American tour. While Arthur prepares his lectures, Louisa becomes entranced by the vibrant, dangerous metropolis brimming with debauchery and iniquity around every corner. When a woman's mutilated corpse turns up in a Bowery alley, Louisa recognizes the victim as someone she's seen in the hotel. Obsessed with the woman's gruesome death, Louisa starts piecing together clues to reveal a story of murder and depravity??a story that leads back to the hotel itself and a madman who is watching her every move.

From Fifth Avenue's glitzy opulence to the smoky boy's club of the New York Express and the Tombs of Lower Manhattan, Winter at Death's Hotel is an electrifying tale of a society caught in the throes of a story transformation and one woman determined to redeem it at whatever cost.

Praise for Winter at Death's Hotel

"Louisa is a fascinating creation...Conan Doyle's wife is a clever choice as the novel's central character, embodying the fears and aspirations of women of the period, and the ingenious plot does not diminish the horrors she has to confront."??Sunday Times (UK)

"A well-realized mystery that shows promise for future books in the series."??Sunday Business Pos… (mehr)

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This novel was difficult for me to review, as I have two sides to my opinions on it.

One one hand, the writing was at times gripping, the author had a good, believable voice, and at times I was very into the storyline. But then the story would rely on yet another old cliche, and ruin things for me.... And I'm not the only female reader who seems to have felt this, either. “Winter at Death’s Hotel” by Kenneth Cameron seems to be lacking in Sense and Logic, at times.

What Mr Cameron has done with this novel, is he has at times indulged in every sick male fantasy along the way, allowing his heroine Mrs Doyle to be brutalized and near-raped by a crazed villain who was so obvious right from the beginning, I'd be concerned if you could not tell by half way through the novel. And just when you thought you couldn’t possibly be more irritated at all this, at the very end the author lets the villain escape and doesn’t even bother to tie together any of the other plot strings. The ending is VERY abrupt. I hated it, for many reasons.

These Are my issues with this novel:

-The plot, which may or may not have been based on Dr. H H Holmes' murder house, had some serious problems. Mr Cameron tries to make us believe that a tall, very large-shouldered man could snake his way through a narrow, less than 2 feet wide gap between walls AND climb up and down ladders and slide through trap doors in these “tunnels” with ease. While clearly totally insane, and having some kind of disease that effected his head so that it swelled very large, as well. (Wouldn't that effect his balance, and coordination at all...?).

-Somehow, the actual killer (not the elder hotel owner) is able to chase after two females, who are much smaller than him, without any problems at all, holding a knife in one hand and a lantern in the other, while tearing up and down vertical ladders and flitting through trap doors that are 2 feet wide, like some kind of monkey?

- And in ALL the years this peeping tom was doing this, no one else saw, or heard anything, to make them complain to the management, and find out why....? Only the servants notice, and complain, but the think it's just ghosts....? Ok, I will suspend my beliefs and my training in Architecture, and just keep reading...

-Incidentally, having suffered sprained ankles many times over throughout my life time, I would think that one doesn’t hobble about with crutches or walking sticks for 2 weeks like 28-year-old Louisa Doyle does. I haven't sprained my ankle nearly that badly, but to me, Louisa's ankle seemed broken, instead. Also, one does not take drugs like morphine for the first 3 days to dull the allegedly excruciating pain – it’s not actually that painful once the foot is elevated and wrapped up. And iced, for that matter.

-When Mrs Doyle craves independence from her controlling husband and seeks the companionship of other females, this author promptly lets her meet a preposterous pre-suffragette woman who tells Mrs Doyle that the “perfect man” is a man who acts out all his fantasies. In other words, when a woman has achieved independence as three of the women in this story have, she talks nothing but nonsense and can’t be anything other than a man hater and lesbian. I found this other character annoying and bitter. And then the same character helps Louisa throughout the end of the novel.....which doesn't seem like something that character would turn around and do....please correct me if I'm wrong?

-Then Dr. Conan Doyle starts acting horrid, and not giving Louisa hardly any money. Just what did this man expect his wife to live on, while he was gone for weeks, and while supporting/paying a maid? At this point in the novel the reader wonders if the author is trying to telling us that Louisa had better be a meek little wife, tolerating her husband’s irritating, mean and pompous ways instead of looking for a better life and marriage. I found Cameron's version of Dr. Conan Doyle really mental, with his mood swings and tight-fistedness as ridiculous, and off-putting. But thinking of your wife as more of a child than an equal? Like Dr. Conan Doyle did at the end of the novel? EW. Mr. Cameron, how could you?

-And the whole scene with the elder hotel owner was totally unnecessary, and the “Show us your Tits” type of chauvinistic writing.

-Also, every time a female character of this book is left to her own devices and without male company, she immediately strips off and twirls around her room without wearing much of anything. Given that the plot is set in the winter (the title was a dead give-away) and that 1896 hotels didn’t have the type of central heating we have today, this behaviour is clearly aimed to please male readers – which I doubt many would read this novel. And, Victorian people’s attitude to nudity was such that they would have bathed in their undergarments and not stripped off at all, never mind how cold or warm the room would have been.

-When protagonist Mrs Doyle meets the character of Minnie Fitch, a woman newspaper reporter cliché, both women embark on the beginnings of a lesbian relationship instead of doing what they set out to do, namely being comrades in arms against a common foe and becoming friends in the process. Naturally, the reporter suddenly freaks out mid-kiss, and won't return any of Louisa's phone calls. I'm guessing it's because she's worried she will be labeled subversive as well as another character did. (Fitch got murdered in the end, so this wouldn't happen. Don't worry! [sarcasm])

-When the reveal finally arrives, every reader with an ounce of sense will have guessed who the killer is. There were only ever 3 men who had the means and opportunity, and it was pretty obvious which one of them would be the killer.

-Not content with subjecting his heroine and female readers to horrendous ways in which the killer has murdered and disposed of his female victims, the author now treats his readers to a graphic description of a rape, the brutalization of two women, one of them Mrs Arthur Conan Doyle herself. What the descendants of historic characters like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and his wife must have made of this horrible book one can only wonder.

-The author tells us that he researched New York City’s architecture as it was in the 1890s – it would have been far better had he spent time researching what motivated Victorian women, what their aspirations were in 1896 and what women really think of men – then and now. For it would have allowed him to present readers with realistic and believable female characters instead of hackneyed comic book fiction versions of women...and men for that matter.

-The brutalisation of women in this book is clearly used to shock us all, or perhaps even titillate those that like these kinds of scenes. All they did for me was trigger my rape issues.

-Dr. Conan Doyle lets the bleeding, dying killer get away, instead of pursuing him to help him out, because he is so worried about his poor little wife.

-The jewelry Louisa pawned, because her hubby was so tight with money can no longer be bought back, as the claim slip has burned up in the hotel's massive fire in the end. Which is a small issue, but how about it?

-The disfiguring disease/issue the elder hotel owner had, that disfigured his face and head, and caused Louisa to think was leprosy, was never explained. Was it contagious? Is Louisa going to get it?

-Teddy Roosevelt was an awful caricature, and I hated that.

My likes about this novel: or, But then again......

One of the main themes in the novel is the police brutality and corruption. Two men are on the take and Louisa and Maggie set out to prove that they have covered up the first murder in order to collect money from the husband. So you should expect this kind of behavior, in a city rife with it.

At the heart of Winter at Death’s Hotel is the figure of Louise Conan Doyle and she charms the socks off at nearly every page. A young and confident woman, vibrant and funny, restricted by her corsets and the conventions of marriage, she loves her husband Arthur, revelling in a sexual desire that is barely confined to the privacy of the bedchamber. This restraint or secrecy or even hypocrisy is a powerful theme of the novel. What is it that goes on behind closed doors, what secrets do walls hide and what happens when these passions or instincts are unleashed? Louisa might be tied by tradition and moral codes but, with her husband away, she can snip away at the laws, bit by bit.

Louisa draws others into her investigations, especially the ‘modern’ female journalist Minnie Fitch, her maid Ethel, the hotel detective and other guests in the hotel, which include Henry Irving and William ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody – a fascinating cast of characters. Then there is the police force. This is a time when New York City was ruled by its gangs and members of its police force had their own allegiances and codes. Everyone has their own agenda and goals, leaving Louisa and Minnie almost alone to fight for the victims. Very soon there is more than one and the Ripper-esque horrors suffered by these women makes Louise fight all the harder.

Kenneth Cameron achieves something nearly special with the style of "Winter at Death’s Hotel". It is -sometimes- extremely well written but it also benefits from an ease and accessibility that pulls the reader in from the beginning. All credit to Cameron for creating such a some what believable and likeable female heroine. Louisa is an admirable guide through the maze of 1890s’ polite society, through the pitfalls of a happy upper middle class marriage, and, ultimately, through a terrible sequence of events.

In a way, this ease and charm, the way we fall for characters such as Louisa and Minnie, it fools us because it means we are completely unprepared for the way that events unfold. I think while I read the second half of the novel it really turned things around for me, made me forget all the little issues that caused me consternation in the first half, and kept me reading through to the ending. This is certainly a novel I won’t forget in a hurry. But I don't know if I can urge anyone to read it.

How about 2 and a half stars? ( )
  stephanie_M | Apr 30, 2020 |
Wife of Arthur Conan Doyle in New York with sprained ankle while he does a "book tour". She, nearly singlehandedly, solves gruesome crimes. mwahhh...got a bit stretched out - thought I might never finish. Interesting insights into Victorian era. Touched many subject areas. Glad I finished it, but there were times. . . . ( )
1 abstimmen CasaBooks | Mar 14, 2014 |
WINTER AT DEATH'S HOTEL by Kenneth Cameron is an interesting Historical Mystery set in 1896 New York. Sherlock Holmes meet Louisa Conan Doyle,yes this is Arthur Conan Doyle's wife! Arthur is the creator of the famous Sherlock Holmes of England. When they arrive at the Britannic Hotel in New York for an American tour, what they find is murder and mayhem. Louisa recognizes the murdered and mutilated body of a young woman she had seen in the hotel and so the story begins.....A gripping tale of murder,mayhem,suspense, corrupt police, tension, and a few queer characters to be sure. Follow Louisa, amateur detective,the hotel's detective,and a female news reporter as they piece together a story of depravity,murder and a madman who watches Louisa's every move. A complex but intriguing story! It shows what young women of that time period had to endure to survive,as well as their fears and aspirations. What a thrill ride! An enjoyable read with flawed but enjoyable characters. Sherlock Holmes enthusiast, as well as historical readers alike are sure to enjoy "Winter at Death's Hotel". If a T.V. special was to appear out of this story it is surely to be a most watched story. I know I would watch it. Well written,fast paced,and filled with suspense. Received for an honest review from the publisher.

RATING: 4

HEAT RATING: MILD

REVIEWED BY: AprilR, Review courtesy of My Book Addiction and More ( )
1 abstimmen MyBookAddiction | Sep 15, 2013 |
While the cat was away, the "mouse" was playing. Louisa Conan Doyle, the wife of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, had an accident in their NY hotel and wasn't able to go with Arthur on his American book tour. She took advantage of being a woman of the 1800’s without her husband. She was getting to play detective, and it wasn't a murder in one of her husband's books.

Before Arthur left, though, he warned his wife about getting involved in this murder investigation and also about the social implications of her going out alone, but Louisa wasn't one to listen to her husband when she had something on her mind that she "HAD" to do. Louisa knew she saw a murder victim walking out of their hotel the first day they arrived, and she wanted to make sure the police knew she had information.

Despite Louisa's being told to stay out of this investigation by her husband as well as the authorities, she pursued it. She said she must let everyone know what she knew and that she could help them find out where the murder took place, who was involved, and who the murderer was.

Was it pure luck that she had fallen down in the hotel and was not able to go on the tour with her husband? She thought it had been luck because now she would be able to help solve the murder, but the New York Police Department wasn't feeling lucky.

Louisa wanted justice served and just couldn't understand how New Yorkers and Americans could take murders and disappearances so lightly. She took on the Police Department as well as the hotel manager and the hotel detective to set them straight.

Louisa was a great character and a character very much ignoring the rules set for a proper English lady or any lady in the 1800's. I laughed at her antics and her bravery. She just wouldn't give up.

The other characters included policemen, hotel guests, and the hotel owners. The book was right on for the time period and its social protocol both in and out of the police station.

I thoroughly enjoyed WINTER AT DEATH'S HOTEL. I enjoyed the characters, the detailed descriptions, and definitely the humor and the storyline. The ending had the murder solved, but it was a comedy of errors.

WINTER AT DEATH'S HOTEL is an enjoyable, change-of-pace mystery with a marvelous, entertaining, and determined main character. 5/5

This book was given to me free of charge without compensation by the publisher in return for an honest review. ( )
  SilversReviews | Aug 6, 2013 |
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Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. Historical Fiction. HTML:

"Part historical fiction, part psychological thriller, Cameron's work is all page-turner."-Library Journal, STARRED Review

Sherlock has nothing on this woman ? in 1890s New York, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's wife hunts down a serial killer...

New York, January 1896. Arthur Conan Doyle, the renowned created of Sherlock Holmes, arrives with his wife Louisa at the Britannic Hotel in New York for his first American tour. While Arthur prepares his lectures, Louisa becomes entranced by the vibrant, dangerous metropolis brimming with debauchery and iniquity around every corner. When a woman's mutilated corpse turns up in a Bowery alley, Louisa recognizes the victim as someone she's seen in the hotel. Obsessed with the woman's gruesome death, Louisa starts piecing together clues to reveal a story of murder and depravity??a story that leads back to the hotel itself and a madman who is watching her every move.

From Fifth Avenue's glitzy opulence to the smoky boy's club of the New York Express and the Tombs of Lower Manhattan, Winter at Death's Hotel is an electrifying tale of a society caught in the throes of a story transformation and one woman determined to redeem it at whatever cost.

Praise for Winter at Death's Hotel

"Louisa is a fascinating creation...Conan Doyle's wife is a clever choice as the novel's central character, embodying the fears and aspirations of women of the period, and the ingenious plot does not diminish the horrors she has to confront."??Sunday Times (UK)

"A well-realized mystery that shows promise for future books in the series."??Sunday Business Pos

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