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| Hotel Liaison (Modern Romance (Bold Strokes Books)) | 
enlarge | Author: Jlee Meyer Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Category: Book
List Price: $15.95 Buy New: $9.01 You Save: $6.94 (44%)
New (26) Used (8) from $6.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 33413
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 231 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.6
ISBN: 1602820171 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781602820173 ASIN: 1602820171
Publication Date: June 10, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20081006210455T
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Product Description Two women searching through a secret past discover that their brief hotel liaison is only the beginning.
Laurel Hoffman, an associate professor of women's studies in Berkeley, struggles to stay on track for tenure while caught up in the last throes of a crumbling relationship with a senior colleague. When she hears of a hotel being renovated and a secret room full of papers about women who once stayed there, she knows she has a potential career-saving article.
Stefanie Beresford, the hotel owner, is not exactly receptive when Laurel approaches her about researching the hotel's history, but that doesn't stop her from flirting with the alluring academic. She doesn't need the distraction, but for the first time in her life she wants to take a chance on more than a fleeting encounter.
While Laurel can't deny her powerful feelings for Stefanie, she fears she's risking her heart as well as her future if she acts on her desires. But can a simple encounter between two rational adults really be all that dangerous?
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
Totally Entertaining! June 17, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
Don't miss this wonderfully inventive story. In addition to a lovely romance or should I say romances, the story has shades of John Grisham's 'The Chamber' and 'The Client'. The novel is timely and also historical.
Set in gorgeous San Francisco (looking forward to my first meal at 'Sears'), the story has numerous plot threads and characters that seamlessly blend together to a smashingly exciting and affirming conclusion.
In addition to Laurel and her relationship with Rochelle, we have Stefanie, her best friend Denny, Denny's fabulous mother Sika and Denny's friend Jock (Jocelyn) who is a general contractor. Teenage Ember comes into the mix bringing her unique back story. Most interesting for me was Mrs. Castic the elderly resident on the 3rd floor, a fascinating woman who probably could warrant her own book.
And a cameo appearance from a character from an earlier book by this author make this novel a winner.
At almost 250 pages this is a substantial read that you will thoroughly enjoy!
Don't miss the author's other novels -
Forever Found First Instinct Rising Storm
Her best book yet.... July 4, 2008 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
I've read all of JLee Meyer's past novels and I believe that this is the best work that she's done to date. Originally when I read the premise of the book I wasn't sure what to think, but having read JLee Meyer's books in the past I ordered it. I'm so glad that I did!
There are not only 2 strong central characters, Stephanie, the hotel owner and Laurel, a history prof of Women's Studies at the nearby university, but there are also several other critical players in this book. They all have a story to tell and the reader is struck by how women can work well to help each other, that is except one person who Laurel must face head on in order to save her own life, the life that she needs to live. The women in this book are young, old and in between, but they need to learn from each other in order to keep the hotel.
A secret room is discovered....and it holds secrets from the past that actually link to the present. Those secrets might save the hotel, or they might be the hotel's downfall.
There's a surprise visit in the book by a character from JLee's other novels and it works so well that I was cheering the closing pages of the book.
This is a novel that will leave you smiling. I'm looking forward to the series that the author has said this will become. I can see where the strong women in this novel leave a lot of stories still to be written.
Go out and buy this book. Then go and stay at a boutique hotel and see if you look at it the same way again. :>)
Less can be more September 8, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I was really looking forward to this book after having read the reviews about it. And I have to say that there is an intriguing plot to it but, there is a but... well, to be honest two buts. My first but: I love character development and I love to get to know my heroines in the course of a tale. And that is where the story lacks. Bitterly. The author just put too many interesting stories, too many fates, to many different personalities with background stories about whom I would have wanted to know more into 231 pages. And I found that absolutely irritating. Let's see: There is a woman who is abused from her girlfriend and tries to get out of this relationship. She falls in love with a woman who owns a hotel and who is not sure if it is the right time for a relationship for her. There is yet another woman, an old lady, that lives in the hotel and you just know that there is a secret around her. There is another woman who feels that she can't do relationships because of something that has happened in her past. There is another woman, the best friend of the hotel owner and the one feeling unable to do relationships that runs around in this story as well. And there is a teenager, run away from home, which meets the old lady mentioned before. And these were just the main characters and the main minor parts. I am sorry, but this is just way too much for me. I have to admit that I begun to loose interest rather soon and was only skimming through the book from page 100 on. This is a bit of a shame because, like I stated earlier, the plot is intriguing. And I like the way JLee Meyer worked the abuse girlfriend thing... in the beginning. And this is my second but: Because, honestly, how realistic is it that a woman coming right out of an abusive relationship is turning into some kind of sex maniac with another woman she just met recently. Does that sound healthy to you? Sorry, I really had a problem with that one. All in all I give three stars to this book because of the interesting idea.
Astonished July 3, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Forever Found was amazing--senstitive, multileveled, intriguing characterizations, deftly crafted, absorbing. Hotel Liaison, however, simply defies description--IT STUNS the reader's senses; IT INVIGORATES the reader's viscera; IT RENEWS the reader's spirit; IT is a most astonishing work.
Abuse comes in many forms July 15, 2008 2 out of 6 found this review helpful
Abuse exists in many forms. It can exist within relationships, organizations, or societies. Hotel Liaison is a romance that has at its heart abuses of several different types.
Stefanie Beresford and her friends are trying to restore an old hotel with the idea of creating a business that would cater only to women. Things have not been going well as they've found themselves beset with unreliable contractors, cost overruns and mounting mortgages. The entire project seems endangered when they break through a wall and find a secret cache of old papers that indicate, ironically, that the hotel might have been a meeting point for women in the past and might have historical significance. Laurel Hoffman is an assistant professor specializing in women's studies who is respected by her colleagues and admired by her students, but she's trapped in an emotionally and physically abusive relationship with her partner who also happens to be the chairman of her department. When one of her students suggests she might be interested in looking at some old papers found on a construction site she's working on, Laurel uses it as a temporary escape from problems at home. The papers bring Laurel, Stefanie and an interesting group of women together for several missions. They find themselves not only trying to save the hotel and Laurel, but dealing with the misuse of power by businessmen and within families. There is also a conspiracy lurking in the background trying to undermine everything they do. As Laurel and Stefanie are drawn closer together, they realize there is more to fight for than just their relationship and more to win than a chance for love.
Hotel Liaison is Meyer's strongest book so far. The characters are much better developed and the plot is more complex. There are some weaknesses. Some points in the book are just a little too convenient and contrived; however, the interlacing of the different story lines keeps the reading fresh and the conspiracy theory is interesting. This book has a little bit for lots of people - romance lovers, mystery lovers, historians and conspiracy buffs.
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