The Court of Birds
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39,99 |
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Beschrijving
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Between 1911 and 1914, the growing grandeur of Mission Inn transforms Riverside, California, into a destination for railroad investors, wealthy travelers, and ambitious civic leaders. Hidden beneath the elegance of fountains, arches, and glowing courtyards exists an entirely different world of servant corridors, construction dust, late-night labor, and vulnerable employees whose futures depend upon silence.Clara Sinclair has lived inside the hotel since childhood after personal tragedy left her with nowhere else to go. Raised within the rhythms of the Inn by Alice Miller Richardson, the calm and disciplined woman who quietly oversees much of the hotel's hidden operation, Clara grows into a capable young employee moving between kitchens, service passages, guest suites, and unfinished construction zones. The hotel becomes both sanctuary and prison, protecting her while constantly reminding her of the dangerous imbalance between wealthy guests and the working women expected to serve them.As construction begins on the magnificent Court of the Birds, influential railroad investor Horace Wainwright becomes a frequent presence at the hotel. Publicly celebrated as a respected businessman and benefactor, Wainwright gradually directs unsettling personal attention toward Clara beneath the protection of his wealth and social standing. Alice recognizes the growing danger but understands the harsh realities of 1911 society. Respectable men are protected. Young women are rarely believed.Gabriel Rourke, the Irish stone foreman supervising much of the courtyard construction, quietly watches over Clara as tension inside the expanding hotel deepens. While the Mission Inn presents itself to guests as a place of refinement and civic optimism, fear begins spreading through servant corridors, scaffold walkways, and unfinished stone passages hidden beneath the public grandeur.Then one winter night inside the unfinished Court of the Birds, a violent confrontation changes multiple lives forever.What follows is not merely a mystery about a disappearance, but a story about mercy, class, loyalty, guilt, and the terrible moral cost of protecting vulnerable people inside institutions built to preserve reputation above truth. As Riverside celebrates the completed courtyard as an architectural triumph, those closest to the secret must continue living above the silence buried beneath the stone.Framed by a 1977 restoration effort uncovering long-hidden structural inconsistencies beneath the courtyard foundation, the novel explores whether history preserves truth honestly or simply protects the stories powerful people prefer to remember. Atmospheric, restrained, and emotionally haunting, the story treats the hotel itself not only as setting, but as witness, accomplice, sanctuary, and keeper of memory
Vergelijk aanbieders (1)
Between 1911 and 1914, the growing grandeur of Mission Inn transforms Riverside, California, into a destination for railroad investors, wealthy travelers, and ambitious civic leaders. Hidden beneath the elegance of fountains, arches, and glowing courtyards exists an entirely different world of servant corridors, construction dust, late-night labor, and vulnerable employees whose futures depend upon silence.Clara Sinclair has lived inside the hotel since childhood after personal tragedy left her with nowhere else to go. Raised within the rhythms of the Inn by Alice Miller Richardson, the calm and disciplined woman who quietly oversees much of the hotel's hidden operation, Clara grows into a capable young employee moving between kitchens, service passages, guest suites, and unfinished construction zones. The hotel becomes both sanctuary and prison, protecting her while constantly reminding her of the dangerous imbalance between wealthy guests and the working women expected to serve them.As construction begins on the magnificent Court of the Birds, influential railroad investor Horace Wainwright becomes a frequent presence at the hotel. Publicly celebrated as a respected businessman and benefactor, Wainwright gradually directs unsettling personal attention toward Clara beneath the protection of his wealth and social standing. Alice recognizes the growing danger but understands the harsh realities of 1911 society. Respectable men are protected. Young women are rarely believed.Gabriel Rourke, the Irish stone foreman supervising much of the courtyard construction, quietly watches over Clara as tension inside the expanding hotel deepens. While the Mission Inn presents itself to guests as a place of refinement and civic optimism, fear begins spreading through servant corridors, scaffold walkways, and unfinished stone passages hidden beneath the public grandeur.Then one winter night inside the unfinished Court of the Birds, a violent confrontation changes multiple lives forever.What follows is not merely a mystery about a disappearance, but a story about mercy, class, loyalty, guilt, and the terrible moral cost of protecting vulnerable people inside institutions built to preserve reputation above truth. As Riverside celebrates the completed courtyard as an architectural triumph, those closest to the secret must continue living above the silence buried beneath the stone.Framed by a 1977 restoration effort uncovering long-hidden structural inconsistencies beneath the courtyard foundation, the novel explores whether history preserves truth honestly or simply protects the stories powerful people prefer to remember. Atmospheric, restrained, and emotionally haunting, the story treats the hotel itself not only as setting, but as witness, accomplice, sanctuary, and keeper of memory
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