The mystery guest

Nita Prose

Book - 2023

"When an acclaimed author dies at the Regency Grand Hotel, it's up to a fastidious maid to uncover the truth, no matter how dirty."--

Saved in:

Bookmobile Fiction Show me where

MYSTERY/Prose Nita
0 / 1 copies available

Bookmobile Spotlight Show me where

MYSTERY/Prose Nita
1 / 1 copies available

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Prose Nita
6 / 7 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Bookmobile Fiction MYSTERY/Prose Nita Due Nov 30, 2024
Bookmobile Spotlight MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Due Dec 4, 2024
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
1st Floor MYSTERY/Prose Nita Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Nita Prose (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
291 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593356180
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Hotel maid Molly Gray (first seen in The Maid, 2022) is bright but slightly odd and socially awkward. Deserted by her drug-addicted mother, Molly was raised by her Gran, who loved Molly devotedly and taught her valuable life lessons. All Molly ever wanted was to be a maid like Gran, and her hard work has paid off with her recent promotion to head maid. But now Molly is faced with another murder at the Regency Grand Hotel. Acclaimed author J. D. Grimthorpe is holding a press conference at the hotel, but just as it's about to begin, he keels over and dies. The police arrive, and Molly's chagrined to find that her old nemesis, Detective Stark, is the lead investigator. It seems Grimthorpe was poisoned; Molly knows she's innocent, but can she find the real killer before she ends up behind bars? Unpleasant memories from Molly's past, secrets, lies, and revenge all play a role in Grimthorpe's death, but once again, Molly proves that she's more than "just a maid" in this heartwarming, feel-good mystery.

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

The underwhelming follow-up to Prose's 2022 bestseller The Maid once again centers 29-year-old Molly Gray, who has just been promoted to head maid at the five-star Regency Grand Hotel in an unnamed city. Neurodivergent Molly--whose penchant for cleanliness makes her great at her job, even though her difficulty understanding social cues sometimes gets her into trouble--gets caught up in another scandal when renowned mystery author J.D. Grimthorpe comes to the Regency Grand to make a special announcement in the recently restored Grand Tearoom. Journalists, fans, and eager hotel staff gather to hear Grimthorpe speak, only to be shocked into silence when he falls dead at the podium. Police detective Stark, who believed Molly to be a killer in the previous book, again heads up the investigation, and again suspects Molly of murder on account of her stoic demeanor (and, in this case, her proximity to Grimthorpe's tea before he died). To clear her name, Molly launches her own investigation, which involves digging deep into her past; she used to help her late grandmother clean Grimthorpe's mansion. After the novelist's death, the plot lurches along, stuffed with repetition and excessively long dives into Molly's childhood memories. Along the way, Prose packs in precious few surprises. Molly is still a well-drawn heroine, but this falls short of its predecessor. Agent: Madeleine Milburn, Madeleine Milburn Literary. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Three years after a previous encounter with murder, Molly Gray is head maid at the Regency Grand Hotel, a five-star boutique hostelry. She's trained her new maid, Lily, to handle the tea cart for the inn's guest speaker, J.D. Grimthorpe, the best-selling author of over 20 mysteries, a recluse who seldom appears in public. The media and his rabid fans have gathered at the inn to catch a glimpse. Grimthorpe surprises everyone, first by coming down from the stage to doctor his own tea, and then by dropping dead just before he can finish his speech. Molly has the presence of mind to remove Lily from the scene, but she can't prevent her old nemesis, Detective Stark, from investigating Grimthorpe's death. When it's revealed he was poisoned, Molly realizes she may hold the key to the case; as a young girl, she visited the Grimthorpe mansion, and Molly's past encounters with the author may hold the truth to his death years later. VERDICT The sequel to Prose's award-winning debut The Maid marks the return of a charming protagonist with awkward social skills and a big heart.--Lesa Holstine

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Chapter 1 My beloved grandmother, a.k.a. my gran, worked her whole life as a maid. I have followed in her footsteps. It's a figure of speech. I could not literally follow in her footsteps because she has none, not anymore. She died just over four years ago, when I was twenty-five years old (ergo, a quarter of a century), and even before that, her walking days came to an abrupt end when she suddenly fell ill, much to my dismay. The point is: she is dead. Gone, but not forgotten, never forgotten. Now my feet follow a proverbial trail all their own, and yet I owe a debt of gratitude to my dearly departed gran, for it is she who made me who I am. Gran taught me everything I know, such as how to polish silver, how to read books and people, and how to make a proper cup of tea. It is because of Gran that I have advanced in my career as a maid at the Regency Grand Hotel, a five-star boutique hotel that prides itself on sophisticated elegance and proper decorum for the modern age. Believe me when I say I started at the bottom and worked my way up to this illustrious position. Like every maid who has ever walked through the gleaming revolving doors of the Regency Grand, I began as a Maid-in-Training. Now, however, if you step closer and read my name tag--aptly placed above my heart--you will see in large block letters: MOLLY which is my name, and in delicate serif script underneath it: Head Maid Let me tell you, it's no mean feat to climb the corporate ladder in a five-star boutique hotel. But I can say with great pride that I have held this lofty position for going on three and a half years, proving that I am no fly-by-night, but as Mr. Snow, hotel manager, recently said about me in an all-staff meeting, "Molly is an employee who sustains an attitude of gratitude." I've always struggled with understanding the true meaning behind people's words, but I've gotten a lot better at reading people, even strangers, which is why I know what you're thinking. You think my job is lowly, that it's a position meriting shame, not pride. Far be it from me to tell you what to think, but IMHO (meaning: In My Humble Opinion), you are dead wrong. My apologies. That came out a bit gruff. When Gran was alive, she'd counsel me on tone and advise me when I'd likely offended. But here's the interesting thing: she's dead, yet I still hear her voice in my head. Isn't it interesting how a person can be as present after death as they were in real life? It's something I ponder with frequency these days. Treat others the way you wish to be treated. We're all the same in different ways. Everything will be okay in the end. If it's not okay, it's not the end. I thank goodness I still hear Gran's voice, because today has not been a good day. It has, in fact, been the worst day I've had in approximately four years, and Gran's words of wisdom are providing strength for me to face the current "situation." When I say "situation," I don't mean according to the dictionary definition, denoting "circumstance" or "state of affairs," but as hotel manager Mr. Snow uses the term to suggest "a problem of epic proportions with limited solutions." I won't sugarcoat what is truly an epic catastrophe: this morning, a famous man dropped dead on our tearoom floor. My good friend Angela, head barmaid at the Social, our hotel pub and grill, summarized the "situation" this way: "Molly, a massive bag of shite just hit the whirling fan." Because I like Angela so much, I forgive her use of PPP--Perfectly Polished Profanity. I also forgive that Angela has an unhealthy obsession with true crime, which might explain why she seemed oddly excited about a Very Important Person dropping dead right inside our hotel. Today was supposed to be a special day at the Regency Grand. Today was the day that world-renowned, bestselling, and award-winning author J. D. Grimthorpe, master of mystery with over twenty novels to his name, was set to make a big important announcement in our recently restored Grand Tearoom. Everything was going splendidly early this morning. Mr. Snow had put me in charge of the tea, and while that's mostly because he has yet to hire special-event staff to handle tearoom functions, I knew how proud it would make Gran to see me acquiring new professional responsibilities, though of course Gran can't actually see me, because she is dead. Today, I arrived early for my shift and neatly arranged the elegant new room, setting the tea service for fifty-five guests (give or take none), who were bestowed VIP entry passes. The VIPs included numerous LAMBS--Ladies Auxiliary Mystery Book Society members--who had booked rooms on the fourth floor of the hotel days ahead of the event. For weeks, the whispers and conjecture echoed throughout the hotel: Why would J. D. Grimthorpe, a reclusive and fiercely private writer, suddenly want to make a public announcement? Was it just to publicize a new book? Or was he about to announce he'd written his last? As it turns out, he most definitely has written his last, though I believe this fact was as much a surprise to him as it was to everyone who watched him collapse on the herringbone-patterned floor of the tearoom forty-seven minutes ago. Moments before he walked onstage, the VIP mystery fans, literary pundits, and reporters were abuzz with anticipation. The room was a cacophonous din of chatter and the high-pitched tinkle of silver cutlery as guests refilled their teacups and popped the last of their finger sandwiches into their mouths. The second J. D. Grimthorpe entered, silence fell. The author stood at the podium, a spindly but imposing figure, cue cards in hand. All eyes watched him as he cleared his throat a couple of times. "Tea," he said into the microphone, gesturing for a cup, and thank goodness I'd been informed of his teetotaling ways and had asked the kitchen to prepare a cart to his precise specifications--with honey, not sugar. Lily, my Maid-in-Training, who I'd put in charge of all of Mr. Grimthorpe's tea carts during his stay, jumped into action posthaste. With shaking hands, she poured the famous author a cup and raced it to the stage. "That won't do," he said as he took the cup from her, stepped down from the stage, and went to the tea cart himself. He removed the silver lid of the honey pot, spooned in two enormous globs of glowing yellow honey, then stirred the whole cup with the honey pot spoon, which made a dull clank as it grazed the cup's edges. Lily, who had rushed forward with the intent to serve him, was at a loss as to what to do next. The whole room watched as Mr. Grimthorpe held his cup forth, took a long sip, then swallowed and sighed. "A bitter man requires extra honey," he explained, which elicited muffled laughter from the crowd. Mr. Grimthorpe's irritability has long been a hallmark of his fame, and ironically, the worse he behaves, the more books he seems to sell. Who can forget that infamous moment, which went viral on YouTube a few years ago, when a rabid fan (a recently retired heart surgeon), approached the author and said, "I want to try my hand at a novel. Can you help me?" "I can," Mr. Grimthorpe replied. "Right after you lend me your scalpel. I want to try my hand at heart surgery." I thought of that video this morning as Mr. Grimthorpe smiled his serpentine smile, then sauntered back onto the stage, where he gulped a few more deep drafts from his sweetened teacup, then placed it on the podium in front of him and looked out at his adoring crowd. He picked up his cue cards, drew a labored breath, and at last began to speak as he teetered from side to side ever so slightly. "I'm sure you're all wondering why I've called you here today," he said. "As you know, I prefer to pen words rather than speak them. My privacy has long been my refuge, my personal history a source of mystery. But I find myself in the uncomfortable position of having to make certain revelations to you, my fans and followers, at this critical juncture in my long and storied career--pun intended." He stopped for a moment, expecting laughter, which followed on cue. I shivered as his piercing eyes surveyed the room, looking for what or for whom, I do not know. "You see," he continued, "I've been keeping a secret, one that will no doubt surprise you." He stopped abruptly. He put one long-fingered hand to his collar in a futile attempt to loosen it. "What I'm trying to say is . . ." he croaked, but no other words would leave his throat. His mouth opened and closed, and he suddenly seemed very unsteady, swaying more dramatically from side to side in front of the podium. All I could think about was a goldfish I'd once seen jump from its bowl and lie gaping and apoplectic on a pet store floor. Excerpted from The Mystery Guest: A Maid Novel by Nita Prose 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.