Cover Image: Hokey Pokey

Hokey Pokey

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

So this novel started out with the glitz and glamour of the nineteen thirties, it set up the premise of a fun historical thriller and then turned into a fantasy novel? It leaves a lot of mystery as to whether the fantasy stuff is in the main character's head for a while, but it was definitely more fantasy than thriller. I like fantasy novels, I review a lot of them, but having such a bait and switch be pulled on me was more than a bit disconcerting.

The ending was also too easy. It set up big stakes and then just fixed it with barely any effort taken. It was a real let down, but I was glad I wasn't really into the book because it would have fallen really flat for me.

And honestly it was all a bit weird. The fantasy stuff was only the start. It unsettled me and put me off reading a lot. I liked the sapphic relationship, but everything else was just really odd. This is certainly not a book I would read again.

Was this review helpful?

A very weird and interesting story. It was quite unlike anything I've read before, with a fascinating cast of characters and its own lore that continued to intrigue me. Nora's own story was as sad as it was compelling while the characters around her had their own twisted agendas. The blurb for the book was a little misleading - this is more horror than murder mystery and this line "Though she doesn't see herself as a liar" while true, felt out of place even before you read the book.

I reserve 5 stars for books I know I'll read again and I'm not sure I would, but I'd definitely recommend it if you're looking for something off the beaten track.

Thanks to NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to read this book.

Was this review helpful?

Well that book TOOK A TURN. This book was absolutely *INSANE*…I read it in about three days straight! I couldn’t even explain this book to my family. It escalated so quickly, from an ordinary (borderline dull) mystery, to downright alien. I’d like to read again just to pick up on any clues I had missed. I’ve been gripped. Would highly recommend just for the whiplash!

Thanks to NetGalley for a free ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Ooh, this was a wonderfully eccentric story. Mystery and thriller and horror and supernatural weirdness. And it's glorious, it's so well written. It's not what I expected but I very much enjoyed it nonetheless.

Was this review helpful?

This was such an interesting read! I found myself so engrossed in the story, the characters had such incredible arcs, and I can't wait to follow this author's journey!

Was this review helpful?

Hokey Pokey follows psychoanalyst Nora to the grand Regency Hotel in 1920’s Birmingham, where she has been sent to spy on the wife of her employer who is suspected to be unfaithful. However, before long things take a very unsettling turn.

Sadly, this book was just not for me. I found the plot incredibly disjointed and although this does feel intentional, I found it really difficult to follow and it did put me in a bit of a reading slump. I also struggled to connect with any of the characters in the book as it just doesn’t feel as though the reader gets to know any of them well enough to understand them.

That being said, it is incredibly well written and I absolutely loved the setting. I live very close to Birmingham and the village that Alspath is based on, so there are lots of familiar places and I loved being able to accurately picture where some of the events were taking place.

Overall, I think this was just a bit too different from the types of books I typically enjoy reding. If you’re into historical fiction with lots of twists and turns, it’s definitely worth a try.

Thank you to Karen Mascarenhas, Head of Zeus, Apollo and Netgalley for the ARC of this book.

Was this review helpful?

Another brilliant book from Mascarenhas, this really didn't dissapoint. Eerie and creepy, you never know what's truly going on and what is happening in the characters' minds!

Was this review helpful?

Hokey Pokey by Kate Mascarenhas
Set in the 1920's Nora arrives at The Regent Hotel, Birmingham. She has been sent to spy on opera singer Berenice Oxbow but things are not as they seem & soon a guest goes missing.
I loved the descriptive setting and first half of the book more than the macabre supernatural ending (personal choice not a fault of the writing!)

Was this review helpful?

It's February 1929 and a snowstorm descends on Birmingham. All the railway lines are blocked and a disparate group of guests is stranded in the city centre Regent Hotel. Among them are psychoanalysts Nora Dickinson and renowned operatic diva Berenice "The Icon" Oxbow. Is their presence wholly random, or do the two women have some connection...?

I love novels with a strong location and well depicted setting - as here (the book even comes with plans of the hotel). They allow one to sink into the routines and conventions of the location, and watch the characters run, as it were, though the mazes of the author's invention. Having the protagonists isolated from their normal lives, caught briefly out of time, as it were, adds to the pleasure which here is enhanced by the jousting between Nora and Berenice, and by Nora's startling ability at mimicry - basically if she hears something once, she can repeat it exactly forever. That ability, and the idea of mimicry and of truth, are at the centre of this thought-provoking and satisfyingly complex story - as much as the series of gruesome killings that begins to occur...

An icon is, of course, a depiction of a saint or of God, but one that is held to be more than just an image. Beronice is named for Veronica, who mopped Jesus' tears, obtaining a true icon of the deity. Nora can reproduce life to a startling degree, and, as we find out when we learn the two women's stories, both have history that is entangled with deception, imitation and untruth (the cataclysmic event of Nora's childhood encapsulating this). And it's all taking place in the glittering, mirrored splendour of a hotel, an unreal place with its own contradictions: between the guests' accommodation and the back stairs (the map shows both the guest and staff sides), between the lives of the guests and those of the staff, between the guests' everyday life and their hotel existence. There are of course many secrets to come out, but before they do, they shape events here like invisible plumbing behind ornate walls.

The sense of a charade taking place, of everything being one step away from tumbling down to reveal what is really going on, is intensified by the two womens' positions seeming so shaky. Berenice is accepted and acclaimed because of her voice, which may however fail at any time (it has before). Nora is a woman in a profession dominated by powerful, manipulative men and - as Mascarenhas makes clear - even her presence in the hotel, as a woman alone, is on sufferance (she isn't allowed in the cocktail lounge unaccompanied, for example).

It is a bewildering, intoxicating novel, just as much so, I'd guess, as one of those Hokey Pokey cocktails (recipe helpfully provided) which Nora so much enjoys. With a real taste for time and place and more than a twist of the gothic, this is a book to savour.

Was this review helpful?

Very interesting.
Took me a while to get into it and it did feel dragged at times, but the whole narrative and concept made this a very interesting read.

Was this review helpful?

What a bizarre but fun read!

I was thinking it was going to be a typical murder mystery thriller type of book but has a unique supernatural twist that I enjoyed!

This is one of those books that is best going into not knowing anything.

Definitely recommend for those who like a bit of weird and mystery!

Was this review helpful?

As I was reading this book, I wasn't too sure where the plot was going to lead. I was intrigued by Nora spying on the supposedly cheating opera singer. But there was going to be a lot more to this story. It turns out that Nora grew up nearby and has a dark past, with a secret that she bears. There is a plot twist that I didn't see coming.

Was this review helpful?

'Hokey Pokey' follows Nora, a psychoanalyst who is on a secret mission. She checks into the Regent Hotel, Birmingham, in 1929 to follow a famous opera singer and hopefully find evidence of her infidelity. However, when a snow storm floods the streets of Birmingham, cutting the hotel off from the world, and another guest goes missing, Nora's agenda begins to change. Will she be able to stay focused on the reason she is there or is her past going to catch up with her before she can complete her mission?
As you might know from my other reviews, book set in the 1920s are absolutely my bag. The parts of this novel set in the hotel, with jazzy scenery, costumes and cocktails galore, were my favourite bits by far. This was where the writing really dazzled in my opinion! The flashback sections - which actually take up a large amount of the story - were less compelling to me, but essential to understanding the development of Nora's character, so I think Mascarenhas struck a decent balance there.
The story itself took some very unexpected turns. After a while, it became obvious there was more to this mystery - something darker and more supernatural. Now, while that's no bad thing, it's not even hinted at in the blurb! If you were reading this based on the blurb, probably hoping for an eerie mystery set in a hotel in the 1920s, you could fine yourself confused, shocked and maybe even a little disappointed. Luckily, I didn’t mind the change in direction!
All in all, superb 1920s imagery and plot-twists galore!

Was this review helpful?

Birmingham, 1929. Welcome to the luxurious Regent Hotel, where guests can dine on sumptuous cuisine, sip absinthe in the glamorous cocktail bar, and have their every need catered to by an army of discrete and smartly dressed attendants. While the facade of the uber-stylish Regent may seem highly respectable, this is a place of contradictions, much like its clientele. For some, rules can be bent to accommodate more lascivious tastes, and misdemeanours can be overlooked, if the guests are wealthy enough - or know how to trade in secrets.

As a winter storm closes in, psychoanalyst Dr Nora Dickinson checks in. Her secret mission is to spy on Berenice Oxbow, the famous opera singer from Zurich, on behalf of her psychiatrist husband, but Nora's motives are clouded. When the hotel gets cut off from the outside world in a mighty blizzard, the evil that stalks the corridors of the Regent comes out to play, and Nora might just be the only one that can stem the tide of murder and mayhem that threatens to disrupt her plans.

Hokey Pokey is the third glorious novel from Kate Mascarenhas, and it offers an intriguing extension of the themes she has explored in her earlier books, The Psychology of Time Travel and The Thief on the Winged Horse.

In many ways this is a classic locked room mystery, which Nora finds herself bound to solve when murder raises its ugly head, but this is not your normal golden age crime story. The setting of the Regent Hotel may be straight out of the 1920s, with deliciously described sights sounds and smells that conjure up the delights of the era for your sensuous pleasure, right down to the absinthe laden cocktails available in the bar - but here there be monsters.

Drawing on fable and folklore, Mascarenhas blurs the lines between reality and imagination, moving between events at the Regent, Nora's childhood in the woods of Alspeth, and her life in Zurich. She brings alive visions from your nightmares in true horror fashion, but she incorporates psychoanalytical aspects of the motivations and experiences of the characters too, so you can never be quite sure how much of the story is intended to be taken literally, or metaphsyically - until the truth becomes shockingly clear.

There is a veritable feast of themes running throughout this novel, and Mascarenhas weaves them through compelling scenes thrumming with taut emotion, passion, suspicion, and violence. Identity, control, power and desire are deftly explored; notions of illusion and mimicry are used to perfection; and there are recurring motifs that beautifully link all the parts of the story together. Nora's evolution across the novel, as she comes to understand herself, and what is going on around her, is spellbinding.

I am a big fan of Mascarenhas' writing, especially when it comes to her female characters. I have loved all her novels, and Hokey Pokey is my favourite one yet. I am already craving more.

Was this review helpful?

Sadly this book defeated me. It started off well enough and held my interest until part 2 when it started to wane. By the time part 3 arrived, I had lost the plot completely and so, by a 4 chapters into part 3, I gave up in frustration and moved on to the next book on my very long reading list.

Was this review helpful?

This book was not really as I expected. I am now into horror in any way, including the mildest forms. This came in the category for me, although I can see the imagery of feeling born out of your right family. This crops up a couple of times. This was more vampire than thriller for me, however, I’m grateful to the publisher, author and Netgalley for the opportunity to read this. All opinions are my own and in no way influenced by the fact that I received this ARC in exchange for a review.

Was this review helpful?

Most of the time I had no real idea where this book was going. Initially it really felt like a murder mystery set up, with great descriptions of the hotel and the decorations. Although that murder mystery feeling continued underneath the surface, the main story soon veered off into many other strange and weird directions. I’m unsure why everyone was obsessed with the opera singer, but she was clearly the catalyst for many of the things happening in the hotel. The last couple of chapters were especially surprising. I’m not sure what to make of the end and it left me oddly on edge and unsatisfied.

Was this review helpful?

Unfortunately this was a DNF book. It started off ok but then became very weird about a 3rd of the way through.

You might enjoy this if you’re into dark supernatural horror but this wasn’t for me.

Thank you to the publisher and Netgalley for giving me a copy of this book in exchange for my review

Was this review helpful?

Found it a strange book - a mix of historical fiction with gothic horror, paranormal and murder mystery thrown in.
Nora is a complicated character and you never knew what was real and what wasn’t.
However I did love the descriptions of the Art Deco Regent Hotel - very decadent with glitz and glamour.
Thanks @katemascarenhas @HoZ_Books & @netgalley for the eARC

Was this review helpful?

As a child Nora grows up isolated with a father who appears to care little about her and a mother who tells her nightmarish tales and encourages her to mimic and spy on people. As an adult Nora is following an opera singer Berenice, under the orders of her jealous husband Leo looking for evidence of an affair. Yet Nora is still a skilled mimic and enjoys spying on Berenice and replicating her words and songs. When the hotel in Birmingham where they are staying becomes a crime scene is Nora going to become a victim or is she the murderer or something else entirely?

It's not often that I think a book is too weird for me but this might be it. I can cope with none of the characters being likeable but one minute it's a jealous lover story, then it's blackmail and murder, then it's cannibalistic monsters in the forest. At one point I wondered if the whole thing would be some terrible delusion of a psychiatric patient as that would make sense. Certainly worth a read as I like this author and the Birmingham hotel setting but not my cup of tea

Was this review helpful?