Hotel Angeline: A Novel in 36 Voices

Elizabeth George, Jennie Shortridge, Kathleen Alcalá, Erica Bauermeister, Deb Caletti, William Dietrich, Karen Finneyfrock, Stephanie Kallos, Frances McCue, Kevin O'Brien, Suzanne Selfors, Craig Welch, Matthew Amster-Burton, Sean Beaudoin, Carol Cassella, Robert Dugoni, Mary Guterson, Erik Larson, Jarret Middleton, Greg Stump, Julia Quinn, David Lasky, Susan Wiggs, Kit Bakke, Dave Boling, Maria Dahvana Headley, Kevin Emerson, Clyde W. Ford, Teri Hein, Stacey Levine, Peter Mountford, Nancy Rawles, Ed Skoog, Indu Sundaresan, Garth Stein, Nancy Pearl


Rated: 3.32 of 5 stars
3.32 ·
[?] · 10 ratings · Published: 01 Jan 2011

Hotel Angeline: A Novel in 36 Voices by Elizabeth George, Jennie Shortridge, Kathleen Alcalá, Erica Bauermeister, Deb Caletti, William Dietrich, Karen Finneyfrock, Stephanie Kallos, Frances McCue, Kevin O'Brien, Suzanne Selfors, Craig Welch, Matthew Amster-Burton, Sean Beaudoin, Carol Cassella, Robert Dugoni, Mary Guterson, Erik Larson, Jarret Middleton, Greg Stump, Julia Quinn, David Lasky, Susan Wiggs, Kit Bakke, Dave Boling, Maria Dahvana Headley, Kevin Emerson, Clyde W. Ford, Teri Hein, Stacey Levine, Peter Mountford, Nancy Rawles, Ed Skoog, Indu Sundaresan, Garth Stein, Nancy Pearl
Thirty-six of the most interesting writers in the Pacific Northwest came together for a week-long marathon of writing live on stage. The result? Hotel Angeline, a truly inventive novel that surprises at every turn of the page. 
 Something is amiss at the Hotel Angeline, a rickety former mortuary perched atop Capitol Hill in rain-soaked Seattle. Fourteen-year-old Alexis Austin is fixing the plumbing, the tea, and all the problems of the world, it seems, in her landlady mother’s absence. The quirky tenants—a hilarious mix of misfits and rabble-rousers from days gone by—rely on Alexis all the more when they discover a plot to sell the Hotel. Can Alexis save their home? Find her real father? Deal with her surrogate dad’s dicey past? Find true love? Perhaps only their feisty pet crow, Habib, truly knows. Provoking interesting questions about the creative process, this novel is by turns funny, scary, witty, suspenseful, beautiful, thrilling, and unexpected.
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