This blog is the home of the St. Louis Public Library team for the Missouri Book Challenge. The Missouri Book Challenge is a friendly competition between libraries around the state to see which library can read and blog about the most books each year. At the library level, the St. Louis Public Library book challenge blog is a monthly competition among SLPL staff members and branches. For the official Missouri Book Challenge description see: http://mobookchallenge.blogspot.com/p/about-challenge.h
Thursday, December 6, 2018
The Paragon Hotel
In this beautifully written novel, the Paragon
Hotel is based on Portland, Oregon’s, Golden West Hotel, which was a haven for
people of color, mainly African Americans, from 1906 to 1931. Author Faye says
in the Historical Note that the descriptions she uses of the hotel is as
accurate as she can make them. She did a great job, as I felt I knew the place
inside out.
At the core of this
novel is racism. I found is horrifying to learn that in the 1844, prior to
statehood, Oregon’s Legislative Committee did its best to make the territory
exclusively white. History shouldn’t surprise me, but it does. Oregon was “the
only state of among the fifty ever to explicitly deny blacks the right and live
and work there.” Since the NOW sections of the novel take place in 1921, this
denial is most apparent. The THEN sections of the story provide the backstory
that helps the reader understand the blacks’ plight.
Alice “Nobody” James is on the run
from the New York Mafia with a bullet wound in her side. She boards a train
bound westfor Portland. She is very sick by the time she arrives. She befriends
Max, the black porter who takes pity on her, and takes her to the Paragon, a haven
for “small and increasingly besieged black population.” The fact that Nobody
is white makes them uneasy. Most of the residents like, or at least interested
in Nobody, but not everyone.
Still, Nobody fits right in. That’s
her super power, to be able to remain totally forgettable no matter what
situation she finds herself in. She makes friends with most of the residence,
especially cabaret singer Blossom Fontaine, who reminded me a lot of The Lady Chablis from “Midnight in the Garden
of Good and Evil.”
As Nobody heals, a young boy goes
missing. As the search progresses more and more dirty little secrets come to
life.
This book is complex with its
dualing timelines and threads of mental
illness, the Mob, racism, love, friendship, secrets, romance---all set against
the backdrop of a hotel exclusively for people pf color. Faye has a wonderful
writing style. Nobody’s language is dead-on for a gun moll. It isn’t forced
whatsoever. Faye has the ability to take tired old clichés and similes and make
them new and bright. I wish I had marked some of them.
“The Paragon Hotel” receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.
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