Disclaimer: Jonathan Ball Publishers kindly sent me a copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.
If you were expecting a locked-room mystery set in a fancy hotel in the 1940s you would be stunned to find that the novel Hokey Pokey is of a very different genre, despite the misleading blurb. Rather than a mystery, this story is about two women who have lived very different lives, and how they are brought together through distrust and the supernatural.
The story takes place in 1929, and Nora Dickinson has just checked into The Regent Hotel in Birmingham. A hotel that was famous for an Absinthe-based cocktail called a Hokey Pokey. She has been hired to spy on the famous opera singer Berenice Oxbow, by the singer's own husband, Leo. He believes his wife is having an affair, and Nora, who has this remarkable ability to mimic the people around her is going to use this skill to report back to Leo. Like Leo, Nora is also a psychoanalyst, while Berenice insists she is a clairvoyant and often has 'visions' during her performances. After one of these interrupted performances, Nora begins to keep a close eye on Berenice Oxbow.
"I like the traffic. I like the assortment of humanity, and how very mixed it is. People are willing to show themselves in a hotel because it's an in-between kind of place. Normality is suspended. One is repeatedly exposed to strange, even dubious, phenomena."
The hotel has been snowed-in and to leave would be dangerous. One night Nora wakes up in her room to find a strange man in her room flanked by an enormous dog - beastly in description. Not long after that a woman who reckons herself a bit of a ghost hunter goes missing after visiting the supposedly rejuvenating springs that lie beneath the Regent Hotel. The hotel staff seem keen to cover up stories about giant beasts and missing guests.
"...hotels should be for pleasure or business, but never an emergency in a storm. As soon as people were confined to them, things went wrong. So many people in proximity, none of whom belonged there, and who had been deprived of their exit, were bound to start acting strangely. Because of this, no building cut-off, could rival a hotel for claustrophobia."
As Nora tries to find out exactly what is going on inside The Regent, she's becoming drawn to the woman she's meant to be spying on. She's also starting to relive some of the more traumatic parts of her childhood - Nora grew up in Edwardian England and lived in the woods with her mother who made her daughter spy on the villagers, and especially her own father. All would end in a tragedy, and the only thing to show for it would be a death and a flower tattoo.
The closer Nora gets to Berenice, the more convinced she is that she imagined her traumatic childhood, and if she didn't then perhaps something inhuman is responsible.
This 'Gatsby-era' novel blends genres that overlap and become unrecognizable. A sapphic love affair, a vampire myth, and the threat of murder are all visitors to the Regent Hotel. Hokey Pokey is a fun, and delicately written weird little novel that you'll either love, or you'll hate.