Audra (Unabridged Chick)'s Reviews > Hotel Angeline
Hotel Angeline
by Elizabeth George, Garth Stein (Goodreads Author), Jennie Shortridge (Goodreads Author), William Dietrich (Goodreads Author), Kevin O'Brien (Goodreads Author), Stephanie Kallos (Goodreads Author), Suzanne Selfors (Goodreads Author), Erica Bauermeister (Goodreads Author) , more…
by Elizabeth George, Garth Stein (Goodreads Author), Jennie Shortridge (Goodreads Author), William Dietrich (Goodreads Author), Kevin O'Brien (Goodreads Author), Stephanie Kallos (Goodreads Author), Suzanne Selfors (Goodreads Author), Erica Bauermeister (Goodreads Author) , more…
Audra (Unabridged Chick)'s review
bookshelves: queer, secret-identities, skeletons-in-the-closet, collaborative-fiction, place-pacific-northwest, teenage-heroine-but-not-ya, did-not-finish
May 12, 11
bookshelves: queer, secret-identities, skeletons-in-the-closet, collaborative-fiction, place-pacific-northwest, teenage-heroine-but-not-ya, did-not-finish
Read from May 10 to 12, 2011
Unfortunately, my favorite part of this potentially fascinating novel was the forward and introduction. A fascinating mix of performance art and literary experiment, this novel was born out of a brainstorm to raise awareness about Seattle's literary scene. A basic outline was created and the authors given free reign to interpret and move the story along as they saw fit. Totally neat and super exciting.
From the start, I didn't connect with the story or characters. Alexis is an interesting enough teenager in a very sad situation, but the secondary characters were all so unappealing and the plot so over-the-top that I just couldn't connect with Alexis -- and worse, come to care about her. The running of a residential hotel is very novel and that part intrigued me, but the tenants are all child-adults stuck in the '60s. I think they were meant to be quirky and funny and a little bit pathetic, but I found myself angry and irritated with them -- so much so, I couldn't imagine why Alexis continued to enable them as she did.
I wanted very much to experience Seattle as a character, but despite the numerous mentions of neighborhoods and a few landmarks, I didn't get a sense of the city in the story. Alexis could have been in any liberal urban area; I didn't feel as if Seattle (or the Pacific Northwest) was particularly noticeable in the narrative. Missing that connection, then, all her running around the city was tiresome to me and seemed to be a space filler.
Overall, the quality of the writing was good (I've added about a dozen new writers to my TBR) and for me, the weakness was the story. I just didn't dig the plot. But I enjoyed the language and the sort of kaleidoscopic way each author eyed Alexis and her plight. Seattle folks might enjoy this novel for it's setting, and fans of avant garde fiction might get a kick out of writing-as-performance. Anyone who enjoys reading-as-experience will like the forward and I recommend this book for that alone!
From the start, I didn't connect with the story or characters. Alexis is an interesting enough teenager in a very sad situation, but the secondary characters were all so unappealing and the plot so over-the-top that I just couldn't connect with Alexis -- and worse, come to care about her. The running of a residential hotel is very novel and that part intrigued me, but the tenants are all child-adults stuck in the '60s. I think they were meant to be quirky and funny and a little bit pathetic, but I found myself angry and irritated with them -- so much so, I couldn't imagine why Alexis continued to enable them as she did.
I wanted very much to experience Seattle as a character, but despite the numerous mentions of neighborhoods and a few landmarks, I didn't get a sense of the city in the story. Alexis could have been in any liberal urban area; I didn't feel as if Seattle (or the Pacific Northwest) was particularly noticeable in the narrative. Missing that connection, then, all her running around the city was tiresome to me and seemed to be a space filler.
Overall, the quality of the writing was good (I've added about a dozen new writers to my TBR) and for me, the weakness was the story. I just didn't dig the plot. But I enjoyed the language and the sort of kaleidoscopic way each author eyed Alexis and her plight. Seattle folks might enjoy this novel for it's setting, and fans of avant garde fiction might get a kick out of writing-as-performance. Anyone who enjoys reading-as-experience will like the forward and I recommend this book for that alone!
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Reading Progress
| 05/05/2011 |
|
10.0% | "v cool intro and welcome from editors abt writing/reading - makes me love this idea so much. story is super quirky - v seattle, I think." 1 comment | |
| 05/10/2011 |
|
10.0% | "sadly, not wild abt the story ... or the characters, at least. Heroine thinks her life is like a never ending mad tea party and I agree -- it's maddening and a bit boring. :/" |
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