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The Magic Hotel

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As the weekend arrives, a little girl is so excited because her daddy is coming from far away to take her to the most amazing place in the the Magic Hotel! After checking into the hotel, the girl and her father are handed the keys to doors that lead them on magical adventures to exciting places like the Grand Canyon, an Olympic race track, a volcano, a mountain, and a beautiful lake. In this touching story for children, a father and his daughter create wonderful memories together in a magical hotel that holds not just adventures and fun, but more love than they ever imagined.

36 pages, Hardcover

Published June 30, 2022

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John Reimold

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286 reviews
May 7, 2025
Imagine you’re checking into a hotel where every door leads to another world. Not just a different room, but an entirely different reality—one where you can leap across lava, sprint through Olympic stadiums, and scale mountains that weren’t there yesterday. Now, imagine doing it all with your father beside you, his steady presence turning every adventure into a lesson in courage. This is The Magic Hotel, a book that isn’t just about fantasy—it’s about what fantasy represents: love, security, and the power of storytelling to shape young minds.

But let’s pause here. Is The Magic Hotel merely a whimsical tale for kids, or does it reveal something deeper about how children process emotions and memories?

Behind the Doors: The Psychology of a Child’s Imagination
Children, as psychologists like Jean Piaget suggested, live in a world where the lines between reality and fantasy blur fluidly. At certain ages, imagination is not just play—it is cognitive processing. Every monster conquered is a fear understood. Every magic door opened is a step toward self-confidence.

This book capitalizes on that developmental magic. The young protagonist navigates through ever-changing adventures, with her father as a quiet yet steadfast guide. He doesn’t interfere too much, nor does he take center stage. Instead, he watches, reassures, and lets his daughter learn through experience—a subtle but powerful parenting lesson.

How often do parents try to shield their children from risk, forgetting that safe exploration is the key to resilience? If we bubble-wrap childhood, do we leave them unprepared for adulthood?

The Hotel as a Symbol: More Than Just a Setting
Hotels are transient places. People come, people go. They exist in a limbo between the familiar and the unknown. But in The Magic Hotel, the setting is more than a backdrop—it is a metaphor for growing up.

Consider this: The hotel remains the same, but the rooms change. Isn’t that exactly what childhood feels like? One day, you’re learning to ride a bike. The next, you’re facing your first big disappointment. The world keeps shifting, but if you’re lucky, your parent (or guardian) remains a steady figure through it all.

And then there’s the deeper question—why a hotel and not a house? Is it possible that the hotel represents something else? A transition, perhaps? A place between past and future?

The Unspoken: Hints of Loss and Longing
On page 29, we see an image that seems almost misplaced in a children’s book—a woman leaning over a casket, mourning. It’s a jarring moment, one that stands in stark contrast to the lighthearted adventure elsewhere.

What is this doing here? Is it an accidental intrusion of reality into fantasy, or is it the core of the book itself? The story never directly states that the father is gone, but if you read between the lines, there are whispers of something bittersweet. Could it be that The Magic Hotel is not just a fun romp, but a child’s way of preserving memories? Is this hotel built from imagination… or remembrance?

Famous psychologist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross once said, “The reality is that you will grieve forever. You will not ‘get over’ the loss of a loved one; you will learn to live with it.” If one considers that lens, then this book takes on an entirely different meaning. It becomes a story of how children deal with loss—not through sorrow, but through stories.

Final Thoughts: A Door Worth Walking Through
At first glance, The Magic Hotel is a delightful bedtime story, perfect for sparking a child’s imagination. But on a closer read, it offers much more. It is a meditation on childhood, adventure, memory, and perhaps even grief.

A good children’s book entertains. A great one lingers in your mind long after the final page. And this one? It leaves a door open—both in the story and in the reader’s heart.

So, the next time you tuck your child in and read them a story, ask yourself: What magic doors are you helping them open? And which ones are they keeping open for you?
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