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OverviewIn the summer of 1920, Lydia Whitfield travels from Milwaukee to the Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island after the recent death of her father. She hopes the island's beauty, quiet routines, and distance from home will help her recover from grief and emotional strain. Robert Whitfield, a veteran of the Great War and a former Milwaukee factory worker, arrives on the island burdened by the same losses that have unsettled their marriage. He believes the trip may offer them both a final chance to recover something that has been slipping away since the war. As Lydia settles into the polished, sunlit world of the Grand Hotel, Robert becomes increasingly captivated by the island's stillness, its grand lake views, and the strange calm of hotel life far from the smoke and noise of Milwaukee. Yet beneath the hotel's elegance, something feels unsettled. Guests come and go through its long white corridors. Old families return for the season. A calico cat named Poppy watches certain people with unusual intensity. And on the broad front porch sits Oscar Tibbs, the hotel's beloved elderly greeter, a blind Civil War veteran whose warmth, humor, and sharp instincts have made him unforgettable to generations of summer guests. A quiet friendship forms between Robert and Oscar. Across the Grand Hotel porch, they speak of war, memory, marriage, race, loyalty, and the burdens men carry long after battle ends. Oscar, who came north decades earlier after serving in the 29th United States Colored Infantry, has built a life shaped by hardship, service, and hard-won dignity. Robert, younger and less settled in his own skin, finds in Oscar the first man who seems to understand the weight he has been carrying since France. But Mackinac Island is not as restful as it first appears. Lydia's mood begins to shift. A handsome man from Milwaukee enters the picture. Questions that once seemed buried begin pressing toward the surface. Old wounds reopen. And Robert starts to realize that the distance between what he believes about his marriage and what actually happened may be greater than he ever imagined. Set against the grandeur of Mackinac Island in 1920, this historical mystery blends emotional tension, hotel intrigue, and the lingering shadows of war into a suspenseful story of grief, betrayal, and reckoning. At its heart, it is a richly atmospheric novel about memory, guilt, and the quiet moments in which a life can be changed forever. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Scott HamelePublisher: Schuyler & Sons Publishing Imprint: Schuyler & Sons Publishing Volume: 12 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.807kg ISBN: 9798295743696Pages: 480 Publication Date: 18 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback 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 Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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