In this retelling of The Tempest, a storm traps Anna and her father in a mysterious, magical hotel with a mind of its own and secrets beyond imagining.
My main problem with the book is that the characters feel insufficient. A lot of the beginning of book is focused on Anna's difficulties with her sister getting married and moving on, to the point where it seems like that should be a major recurring thing for the whole story. But it isn't. Anna and her dad's relationship feels like it should be more important, but I never understood their dynamic. Sometimes it seems he doesn't care at all, and the next, he's most concerned about finding her and making sure she's okay. Which is it? Anna and Max have a weird sort of insta-love that isn't quite insta on one side that never feels fully explained, so I didn't care one way or another if they worked out or even if they survived at the end of the book. Anna's dad's partners are mentioned and important, but I never got to truly understand their full story. Overall, it felt like the book was told through paper dolls. Beautiful, but I couldn't bring myself to care about any of the actors.
The writing was sometimes beautiful, sometimes just weird. I don't particularly like books in the present tense, but it worked okay for this book. It took me months to finish this book because the writing style kept distracting me to the point where I would give up and stop reading books completely for a few weeks. Some of the lines were mystical and interesting. But then you had lines like, "But this room is stuffy and as feminine as the inside of a woman's mouth," that made me stop reading for a minute. I... I don't even know what to do with that sentence. I've never really considered the inside of my mouth one of the most feminine parts of me. Was I supposed to? I don't understand what that line is supposed to mean, and I can't stop thinking about it -- and not in a good way.
What does shine in the book is the setting, which I would consider the most fleshed-out character of the book. It's eerie and whimsical and magical, making it feel like something out of Wonderland, The Haunted Mansion, The Secret Garden, and Narnia rolled into one with some Great Gatsby vibes to boot. Like with the characters, there isn't a whole lot of explanation here. You're supposed to just take what you get, but unlike with the characters, it works really well for the Houdini. No one really knows how it works, and that's okay. It just is dark and mystical and magical.
I do think readers who love a good setting and spooky mysteries would enjoy this book more than I did. But if characters are what make or break a book for you like they are for me, this book might not be for you. It's a creative concept with intriguing ideas that unfortunately fell flat.