
Choice Made Simple!
Too many options?Click below to purchase an online gift card that can be used at participating retailers in Village Green Shopping Centre and continue your shopping IN CENTRE!Purchase HereHome
The Lost Floor at the St. Regis: A 1946 Elevator to a 1921 Murder
Coles
Loading Inventory...
The Lost Floor at the St. Regis: A 1946 Elevator to a 1921 Murder in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $8.99

Coles
The Lost Floor at the St. Regis: A 1946 Elevator to a 1921 Murder in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $8.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
In postwar New York, a young woman checks into the St. Regis Hotel carrying a question that has shadowed her family for twenty-five years. Her father died in 1921 under circumstances long dismissed as an accident, yet the story never quite fit the polished version society accepted. What begins as a quiet weekend of remembrance becomes something stranger when the hotel's elevator opens to a hidden half floor that should not exist.
Each night at nine o'clock, the elevator delivers her and her closest friend into a roaring Prohibition-era ballroom where powerful financiers, socialites, and musicians mingle behind closed doors. The women realize they are witnessing the world of 1921 exactly as it was on the nights leading to the fatal confrontation that destroyed her family. As secrets surface among ledgers, private corridors, and whispered alliances, a truth emerges about money, influence, and the quiet spaces where powerful people decide what the public will never know.
Spanning 1921 to 1946, the story explores how private deals, hidden rooms, and guarded reputations can shape lives, families, and justice long after the music stops.
In postwar New York, a young woman checks into the St. Regis Hotel carrying a question that has shadowed her family for twenty-five years. Her father died in 1921 under circumstances long dismissed as an accident, yet the story never quite fit the polished version society accepted. What begins as a quiet weekend of remembrance becomes something stranger when the hotel's elevator opens to a hidden half floor that should not exist.
Each night at nine o'clock, the elevator delivers her and her closest friend into a roaring Prohibition-era ballroom where powerful financiers, socialites, and musicians mingle behind closed doors. The women realize they are witnessing the world of 1921 exactly as it was on the nights leading to the fatal confrontation that destroyed her family. As secrets surface among ledgers, private corridors, and whispered alliances, a truth emerges about money, influence, and the quiet spaces where powerful people decide what the public will never know.
Spanning 1921 to 1946, the story explores how private deals, hidden rooms, and guarded reputations can shape lives, families, and justice long after the music stops.


















