Elizabeth Bowen's first novel brilliantly captures the inflammatory
mixture of passion and repression among well-heeled British tourists on
the Italian Riviera. Their luxurious seaside hotel seems a closed and
comfortable world, marked by dramas no more momentous than tennis games,
picnics, and idle gossip. But for the young women of the 1920s, facing a
dearth of young men after the first World War, it is a battleground for
the clash of tradition and modernity. As rebellious young Sydney Warren
tests the boundaries of her incomplete freedom--and becomes obsessed
with a clever and charming older woman--she increasingly bewilders her
suitors, her handlers, and herself. With the psychological precision and
command of atmosphere that marks Bowen's most famous novels, The Hotel
depicts a collection of privileged men and women in determined denial of
a world that is falling apart around them.