Women's Hotel non-review
Chapter Nine: A Fair Day’s Wage for a Fair Day’s Work
""Muzzle not the ox who treadeth out the corn, dear hearts” was his only response to such complaints." - 1 Timothy 5:18. I'm sure there are plenty of Biblical references I'm not picking up, but it always fascinates me how people raised in Christianity still quote it even when they've spurned religion. Embed it in their minds before they turn seven....
But then later in the chapter: "A good woman, to Lucianne’s mind, was both valuable and rare, like in the thirty-ninth Proverb" - uh, the 39th? This is at the end of Proverbs, chapter 31, verses 10-31. Where does 39 come from? If it's a deliberate error to show something about Lucianne, it isn't working.
"Sudden wealth has a habit of breeding dissatisfaction." Probably not shade at Nicole, but it amuses me anyway.
Stephen, the hotel's elevator operator, makes bank on Moving Day but is unable to convince Mrs. Mossler to give him a raise to minimum wage. Then the chapter meanders. Pauline hates coziness, as well as a list of other things, including the police (proto-#acab).
"And what was the point in living all together, if only to continue to live so decidedly apart?" Probably not shade at Mallory's polycule, but etc. etc. Interesting perspective on a women's hotel, though, so she gets credit for exploring the idea.
"Dolly was enormously cheerful and Nicola was conspicuously well adjusted. Dolly’s last name was O’Connor and Nicola’s was Andelin; Dolly worked in a bar and Nicola worked in the back room at Loehmann’s. They were also lesbians." Shocker.
"They were not lovers, or if they ever had been, Stephen thought it must have been over between them some time ago." #malegaze
Lucianne's take on lesbianism: "It was like trying to make a living as a poet or something: possibly all right for a girl with a lot of money, who didn’t especially care about other people." This is partly based on concerns that men will buy you dinner but two girls with no money can't do much for each other (as opposed to doing things TO each other...).
Lucianne needs employment and tries to get an old proofreading job back. There are discussions about George Sand (the hotel eldress is writing a biography of her) versus George Eliot, and bonus points for including George Egerton. And then we get the backstory of the eldress, JD, because heaven forbid Mallory lets us get to know characters by watching them in action and drip-feeding any relevant information as needed.