The Paradox Hotel A novel

Rob Hart

Book - 2022

"A locked-room murder mystery set at a hotel for time travelers--in which a detective must solve an impossible crime before her own grip on reality crumbles--from the author of The Warehouse On any ordinary day, the Fairbanks--affectionately known to its staff as the Paradox Hotel--is packed with ultra-rich tourists dressed for a dozen different time periods, all anxiously waiting to catch their "flights" to the past. And as if that weren't strange enough, proximity to the timeport makes for some odd side effects. The clocks run backwards on occasion, and ghosts sometimes stroll the halls--or so it's whispered. Now, though, half a dozen of the world's most powerful people have arrived for a summit. Or maybe auc...tion's a better word. The prize: no less than control of time-travel technology itself. On top of that, the hotel's snowed in, and the timeline's acting even stranger than usual. Which means nobody's leaving until further notice. And there's a killer on the loose. Or, at least, that's what head of security January Cole suspects. Except the corpse she's found is one that, somehow, only she can see. And the accidents starting to befall their prestigious guests...well, the only way those could be assassination attempts is if the killer's operating invisibly and in plain sight, all at once. Which is surely impossible. And...well, even January's got to admit her credibility's not as strong as it could be. Because her gig here amounts to paid retirement, a pity posting for a former agent whose temporal perceptions have been so scrambled by the effects of timeline radiation that she's not fit for active duty. January's sure her condition is letting her glimpse something others can't. But she also knows her symptoms are getting worse--which means she might not solve this puzzle before she loses her grip on reality altogether"--

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Hart Rob
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Hart Rob Due May 6, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Time-travel fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Rob Hart (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
336 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781984820648
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Hart follows up his highly praised The Warehouse (2019) with this nifty murder mystery set at a hotel. But this is not your typical hotel. The Paradox Hotel caters to the clientele of a government-run time-travel facility. January Cole, the hotel's security chief, has a lot on her plate, what with a bunch of trillionaires coming to the Paradox, each with his or her own special demands, and the last thing she needs is a murder. At least, she thinks there's been a murder. She's pretty sure there's a body, even though she's the only person who can see it. There's a distinct possibility she's imagining it, but there's also the possibility that the corpse exists in a different time, and that January's getting glimpses of the body because she is not, shall we say, entirely anchored in the now. This wildly ambitious, well-executed genre-bender is suspenseful, clever, and funny.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Time travel has been monetized in this stellar SF thriller from Hart (The Warehouse). The U.S. government charges the 1% "hundreds of thousands of dollars to see the first-ever public showing of Hamlet or visit the Library of Alexandria," but it's still losing money on the hyperexpensive operation. That leads to a privatization initiative, and several trillionaires arrive at the Paradox Hotel to make their proposal to buy the Einstein Intercentury Timeport. Their presence is a headache for hotel security head January Cole, who's suffering deleterious health side effects from entering the time stream frequently and overwhelming grief from the accidental death of her lover, Mena, a waitress at the Paradox. When January sees a stabbed corpse in a guest room that no one else can see, including her smart-ass AI assistant, Ruby, she endeavors to determine whether there's a real murder to investigate or whether it's an apparition that's a symptom of her illness. The twists keep coming without simplifying January's mental struggles in this impressive melding of creative plotting and three-dimensional characters. Hart remains a writer to watch. Agent: Josh Getzler, HG Literary. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Timey-wimey mysteries vex a singular hotel's damaged in-house detective. In 2072, those with hundreds of thousands of dollars to spare can use the federally owned Einstein Intercentury Timeport to see Shakespeare stage Hamlet, watch the Battle of Gettysburg, or witness countless other bygone events. A tram ride away from Einstein is the Paradox Hotel, where guests can obtain costuming, earpiece translators, and era-specific vaccines. Individual "flights" are relatively safe, but frequent travel can be risky; just ask former time cop January Cole, who spent her early career riding the timestream to prevent tourists from altering history and is now Unstuck, a condition that causes her perception to--temporarily and without warning--jump into her past or future. January left the field years ago to police the Paradox, but though the move has done little to slow her ailment's progression, she refuses to retire, as her slips often provide glimpses of her late girlfriend, Mena, who used to work on-site. The U.S. government is hemorrhaging money, so a senator and four trillionaires are holding a summit at the Paradox to discuss Einstein's privatization. The security logistics alone are a nightmare, but factor in strange time fluctuations and a phantom corpse in Room 526 and you have the recipe for a disaster only January can thwart--provided her mind stays put. Inventive action, breakneck pacing, and a delightfully acerbic yet achingly vulnerable first-person-present narration distinguish this speculative noir stunner, which meditates on grief while exploring issues of inequity and determinism. The worldbuilding can feel hand-wavy, and the supporting cast is so large as to occasionally confuse, but on balance, Hart delivers a riveting read likely to win him scores of new fans. Funny, thrilling, poignant, and profound. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Quantum Entrapment Droplets of blood pat the blue carpet, turning from red to black as they soak into the fibers. The drops come slow at first, before turning to a trickle as the bones of my skull squeeze like a hand around my brain. My body yearns to release the tension in my shoulders, to let the pressure off my knees, to lay down and go to sleep. Except it won't be sleep. It won't really be death either. Something more in-between. A permanent vacancy. This moment has been chasing me for years. The third stage, when the strands of my perception unravel and my ability to grasp the concept of linear time is lost. More pats on the carpet. But the blood from my nose has stopped flowing. Heavier, from the other end of the hallway, getting closer. Footsteps. Maybe I can fight this. A handful of Retronim. A cherry lollipop. What if I scream? I open my mouth. Nothing comes out but blood. The footsteps get closer. This is the moment when my brain will short-circuit. That's the third stage of being Unstuck. No one really knows why it happens. The prevailing theory is your mind finds itself in a quantum state and can't handle the load. Others think you witness the moment of your death. I don't give a shit about the "why" of it. I just know the result doesn't look pleasant: a glassy-eyed coma that'll last as long as my body holds out. The pressure increases. More blood. Maybe I'll bleed to death first. Small victories. In a moment I'll be gone. Probably reality too. The timestream is broken and I'm the only one who can fix it, but instead I'm dying on the floor. Sorry, universe. I slip again, memories rattling around my brain like rocks in a tin can. Sitting in my bed, the smell of garlic and chili paste frying in the kitchen, wafting upstairs. Graduating the academy, walking across the gymnasium stage, new heels tearing at the skin of my feet while I scan the sea of folding chairs. The first time I let Mena kiss me, the two of us alone on the balcony overlooking the lobby. That taste of cherries, and everything I ever needed. The footsteps stop. I feel it, the displacement of air, the gravity of another person, standing there, watching me writhe on this dumb blue carpet. Nothing I can do now. It's over. But I'm not going to die on my hands and knees. With the last of my strength I push up . . . Tap-tap-tap. Doctor Tamworth is holding his pen an inch above the flat expanse of his desk, looking at me like I might bite him. Which, the day is young. I take a second to situate myself. The fluorescent light is so white it's almost blue, to match the sky-blue walls and dark blue linoleum tile. So much of this place is blue, which is calming, or so I've been told. The room is otherwise bare, save a small tablet on the desk, a diploma on the wall from a university in his home country of Bangladesh, and a half-eaten deli sandwich in a cardboard clamshell container. I can smell the sting of the vinegar, the funk of the cheese. My stomach growls at it. Ruby is hovering in its usual spot over my shoulder, too close by half. "Where were you just now, January?" Tamworth asks. "Right here, Doc," I tell him, which is only mostly a lie, because the place I slipped to is gone. Something about carpet? I reach for it, but it disappears between my fingers like smoke. Probably not important. "It didn't look like you were here," Tamworth says, his voice an airy, nasal pitch that seems determined to match the creak of his desk chair. "It looked like you were somewhere else." "Your word against mine." Tamworth sighs. "No behavioral changes. That's a start." He heaves his blocky frame to a standing position and turns to the cabinet. The rattle of the pill bottle lifts my soul. He places the orange tube of Retronim on the desk, just next to the sandwich. "I'm increasing your dose," he says. "Ten milligrams. One pill in the morning, one at night. If you're slipping a lot you can take a third, but no more than that in a twenty-four-hour period. Your weight." He raises his hand, spreads his fingers, waves them back and forth. "Figure by the time we get to twenty milligrams in a day, there might be a problem." "What kind of problem?" Tamworth slumps in his chair. "Aggression, irritability . . ." "I must be OD'ing right now." He frowns. "Heart palpitations, confusion, hallucinations. Not to mention your kidneys won't be too happy." "Got it," I tell him, nearly snatching the sandwich, but instead palming the bottle and stuffing it in my pocket. "Take as needed. Like candy." His face goes dark. "Do you ever get tired of this?" I offer him a shrug in response. "Your latest round of scans came in. Let me show you something." He reaches for the tablet, opens it, and tilts it toward me. The mushy oval on the screen is lit up in greens and blues and reds. "This is the brain of a woman your age who has never stepped foot in the timestream." Then he swipes, showing another scan with slightly less color around the center of the mass. "This is your brain. Do you see the difference?" "I'm not a doctor," I tell him. "There's clear degradation in the hypothalamus. We're still not sure exactly how this works, but we believe the problem is related to the suprachiasmatic nucleus, which regulates the body's circadian rhythms . . ." I put up my hand. "Doc, don't tell me you don't know how this works, and then tell me you know what's wrong. I told you. I'm still on the first stage." He taps the screen of the tablet with his pen. "Nobody with this much loss of function . . ." "Except you don't know how this works, so how do you even form a benchmark?" He stops and stutters. "January, I'm doing this for your own good." "I've got my pills, Doc," I tell him. "And if I hit the second stage you'll be the first one to know." He slaps the tablet on the desk. "Retronim isn't a cure. All it does is forestall the inevitable. I have serious concerns about you being here. I know it's supposed to be safe, but look at the clocks. There's clearly radiation leakage. You ought to be somewhere far away. Why not retire? You hit your tier. Find a beach community. Read books. Meet someone." I put my hands flat on the desk and lean forward, taking time to enunciate each word: "Don't tell me what I need." "If you're on to the second stage of this, you know what that means," he says, pleading. "First." "January, I'm not an idiot." "You may well be. And I like it here." "Really? Because it doesn't seem that way." Tamworth peers over my shoulder. "What's your take on this?" Ruby whirs a little closer. I consider whacking it against the wall. Not for any particular reason, just because I consider that a lot. It gives a soft beep and, in its genteel New Zealand accent, says, "Nothing worth reporting, Doctor Tamworth." Tamworth rolls his eyes. I don't have a good insult, nor do I care to formulate one, so I stand and pat the pill bottle in my pocket. It gives another optimistic shake. "Thanks for the lift, Doc. I'll see you around." I wave to the drone hovering at my shoulder. "Let's blow, Ruby." "January . . ." Tamworth starts. "What?" He looks at me again, ready to say something deeply caring and meaningful, probably. Then he thinks better of it. As I leave, I realize I could have handled that better. Could have taken the sandwich. I should feel bad. It's not like he's not wrong. I shouldn't be here. But how could I be anywhere else? Excerpted from The Paradox Hotel: A Novel by Rob Hart All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.