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Hotels of North America (2015)

by Rick Moody

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MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
22813125,444 (3.18)7
"Reginald Edward Morse is one of the top reviewers on RateYourLodging.com, where his many posts do more than just evaluate hotels around the globe--they tell his life story ... The puzzle of Reginald's life comes together through writings that comment upon his motivational-speaking career, the dissolution of his marriage, the separation from his daughter, his struggles with alcohol, and his devotion to a paramour known only as 'K.' But when Reginald disappears, we are left with the fragments of a life--or at least the life he has carefully constructed--which writer Rick Moody must decipher. Are these the crazed ramblings of a nomadic eccentric? Or are they an essential document of our times and a treatise on what it means to be alone?"--Jacket.… (more)
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» See also 7 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
When you enter the negative universe of Rick Moody's "Hotels of North America," remember you are walking the same path Jonathan Swift took with "Gulliver's Travels," and J.P. Donleavy's "The Ginger Man." That way, when you read the hilarious scatalogical adventures of Reginald Edward Morse you won't stop at the political incorrectness. The "hero" of this novel, the unreliable narrator, disburthens himself of his adventures in hotels across the USA, throwing in a few in Europe for good measure. The book is structured as a set of online hotel reviews (mostly bad) but the author intrudes with his sexual escapades, criminal activities, and general misbehaviour. As Moody explains in his metafictional "Afterward" the story is as much about aloneness, the feeling of being separate as anything else. For Morse, being separate gives him the license for misbehaviour. Morse is a cad and a creep. His quasi-reviews make us wonder a bit more about the people whose reviews we actually read on TripAdvisor (me included). I'm sure there is a "Morse" Code, maybe a cynical man's da Vinci Code, and it could take some time to find it. Moody puts the pretentious on trial, the hotels and motels that try to deliver a retail experience and why we fall for them. A hotel stay is a peculiar form of reality we adore because we too are pretentious. Home is not good enough for many of us so we crucify our homes as dull and boring. We look for "reality" on TV. What drove this home for me was the very funny passage on the porn channels that can be found on the TV sets of "family" hotels. Porn is the antithesis of home. Destructive. Disgusting. Moronic. And a big time profit centre for hoteliers. Go figure. ( )
  MylesKesten | Jan 23, 2024 |
Quite fabulous, quite funny but also heart-rending. ( )
  Martha_Thayer | Jan 13, 2022 |
This was a difficult book to rate. I enjoyed huge sections of it, and found myself perversely drawn to the protagonist and his off putting voice, but there were enough drawbacks in the narrative structure and the choice to end on the note that it does that it kept my score at a three and not higher. But it's a fairly short read and subverts the online review culture in a tasty way, so I'd still recommend it. I just wish it went a little deeper at points and didn't have any afterward. ( )
  sarahlh | Mar 6, 2021 |
Witty and entertaining by I got quickly bored of the format and repetitiveness. ( )
  mjhunt | Jan 22, 2021 |
*Disclaimer* I received this ARC from a GR giveaway

I was really excited about winning this book. It seemed like it was a quirky, weirdly formatted novel, and I'm a sucker for that. I made it to page 44 and realized that I just wasn't enjoying reading it. I was bored.

The main characters are bourgeois grifters, and I think that maybe this is supposed to be a social commentary, but if it is it doesn't come across clearly.

I skipped ahead to the afterword hoping that it would lend some insight and make me want to continue with the book. Well, I quickly grew bored reading that as well.

I don't think this book is badly written. I think the author tried to do something interesting and fell short. It just wasn't my cup of tea. ( )
  LynnK. | Aug 4, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 13 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Rick Moodyprimary authorall editionscalculated
Hayes, KeithCover designersecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Preface by Greenway Davies, Director, North American Society of Hoteliers and Innkeepers

As I write these lines it's early springs in the Northeast, and Americans of every age and station are getting back into their cold, muddy, salt-befouled automobiles. They are lining up again at the airports, notwithstanding the humorless security protocols of the current air-traffic moment. The siren melody of spring break is calling to the college-age hedonists of America. And before long it will be Memorial Day, one of the heaviest travel weekends of the calendar year. We here in the New World are "on the move," going where the "weather suits our clothes, where we have business, where we have family, or where there is simply good old-fashioned entertainment.
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There is a style of hotel that we in the reviewing business refer to as assisted living, because of its interior stylings, its floral wallpaper, its imperial draperies. As assisted-living-style hotel always has cotton balls in a little ceramic dish in the bathroom, and a scale, because the elderly lobbyists who stay in a hotel like this, lobbyists for the concrete industry or for pork-products trade groups, are constantly worrying about the extra fifteen. The Dupont is one of these senior-services habitations. -Dupont Embassy Row, Massachusetts Avenue, Washington DC, October 21-November 2, 2010
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"Reginald Edward Morse is one of the top reviewers on RateYourLodging.com, where his many posts do more than just evaluate hotels around the globe--they tell his life story ... The puzzle of Reginald's life comes together through writings that comment upon his motivational-speaking career, the dissolution of his marriage, the separation from his daughter, his struggles with alcohol, and his devotion to a paramour known only as 'K.' But when Reginald disappears, we are left with the fragments of a life--or at least the life he has carefully constructed--which writer Rick Moody must decipher. Are these the crazed ramblings of a nomadic eccentric? Or are they an essential document of our times and a treatise on what it means to be alone?"--Jacket.

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