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OverviewSpanning 1906 to 1945, this historical mystery unfolds inside one of San Francisco's most iconic hotels, where grandeur, catastrophe, and quiet human decisions shape the course of lives. In the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake and fire, a single room emerges from destruction inexplicably intact. Over time, that room becomes the center of a hidden moral force that few recognize and fewer understand. At the heart of the story is a perceptive hotel staff member whose gift is not supernatural spectacle but an uncanny ability to sense the moral weight within people. She does not create fate. She recognizes when it is ready to unfold. Through decades marked by war, economic collapse, and social change, she quietly guides certain guests toward this room, never announcing its purpose and never interfering once its work begins. Each visitor arrives at a turning point. Some are burdened by integrity, compassion, or unrealized potential. Others carry deception, greed, or hidden harm. Inside the room, nothing magical appears. Instead, truth accelerates. For the worthy, it sharpens purpose, restores courage, and opens paths that might otherwise remain unseen. For the corrupt, it hastens exposure, collapse, or consequence already embedded within their choices. As the years pass, the hotel becomes more than a setting. It becomes a living stage where private lives intersect with broader history. The First World War, the Great Depression, and the rising tensions of the Second World War all pass through its halls, bringing with them soldiers, financiers, artists, politicians, and ordinary people standing at the edge of transformation. The woman at the center of it all carries both burden and responsibility. Each decision to send someone into the room weighs on her, especially as outcomes ripple outward, affecting families, communities, and eventually matters of global consequence. By 1945, as world leaders gather to shape a fragile peace, the stakes rise beyond individual lives to the future of nations. In the end, the mystery remains grounded in human truth rather than spectacle. The room does not judge. It reveals. And through decades of quiet intervention, one woman comes to understand that kindness, consequence, and moral clarity move faster than most people realize. The legacy she leaves behind is not power, but a simple truth about how lives change when they are forced to face themselves. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Scott Hamele , Scott HamelePublisher: Schuyler & Sons Publishing Imprint: Schuyler & Sons Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.708kg ISBN: 9798295743917Pages: 536 Publication Date: 23 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationSCOTT HAMELE was born and raised in Kansas and has called the Kansas City area home since 1991. Married for more than thirty years, he treasures time with his two daughters and two grandchildren. Scott studied engineering at the University of Kansas, where he began writing articles and newsletters for university clubs. He was first published in an ASME engineering publication in 1992 and went on to author dozens of published articles in the commercial construction sector. In the 2000s, Hamele turned his research instincts toward historical fiction, developing more than a dozen story concepts, many of which have matured into his recent publishing journey. His work spans a wide range of genres, including historical fiction, near-future thrillers, historical mysteries, narrative biographies, and feel-good short stories. A prolific storyteller, Scott has more than three dozen works to his credit. https: //linktree.com/scotthamele SCOTT HAMELE was born and raised in Kansas and has called the Kansas City area home since 1991. Married for more than thirty years, he treasures time with his two daughters and two grandchildren. Scott studied engineering at the University of Kansas, where he began writing articles and newsletters for university clubs. He was first published in an ASME engineering publication in 1992 and went on to author dozens of published articles in the commercial construction sector. In the 2000s, Hamele turned his research instincts toward historical fiction, developing more than a dozen story concepts, many of which have matured into his recent publishing journey. His work spans a wide range of genres, including historical fiction, near-future thrillers, historical mysteries, narrative biographies, and feel-good short stories. A prolific storyteller, Scott has more than three dozen works to his credit. https: //linktree.com/scotthamele Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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