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The Secret Life of the Hotel

Eloise Moss

Sex, Crime and Protest in British Guesthouses Since 1918

Barcode 9781350535701
Hardback

Original price £21.22 - Original price £21.22
Original price
£21.22
£21.22 - £21.22
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Release Date: 22/01/2026

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: European History
Label: Bloomsbury Academic
Language: English
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Sex, Crime and Protest in British Guesthouses Since 1918
How Britain’s hotels changed the nature of sex, crime and civil rights, told through the voices of those who worked and stayed in them.

Ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes in hotels?

Hotels represent nations, hosting visiting monarchs, politicians, and diplomats. Hotels underpin global networks of travel and communication, on which national and international prosperity have increasingly depended since the end of the First World War. Yet hotels are also places where people can be anonymous; where murderers and thieves mix with adulterers and con artists; and where prejudice finds expression in who is refused access, and in the forms of ‘service’ provided by staff in the lowest-paid roles. The Secret Life of the Hotel: Sex, Crime and Protest in British Guesthouses Since 1918 is the first book to uncover how hotels entrenched inequality, prejudice, and exploitation in Britain’s tourist sector, and in wider society and culture, during the 20th century.

Eloise Moss delves into hotel murders, swindles, and scandals, including the history of Agatha Christie’s disappearance in 1926, the ‘Margate Hotel Murder’, and the divorce of Wallis Simpson in 1936 so she could marry King Edward VIII. Moss’s exploration of the hotel also shines a light on the fight against the colour bar, the formation of the British civil rights movement, and the visit to London of Martin Luther King Jr.

The Secret Life of the Hotel uniquely tells the story of Britain’s relationship with the world during the 20th century through the prism of its hotels, showing how their infrastructure and ‘welcome’ had profound consequences for women, people of colour, LGBTQ+ citizens, and people with disabilities.