The Way Inn
By (Author) Will Wiles
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
15th January 2015
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
352
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 22mm
250g
SHORTLISTED FOR THE ENCORE AWARD
SHORTLISTED FOR THE KITSCHIES
The Way Inn takes the polished surfaces of modern life, the branded coffee and the free wifi, and twists them into a nightmare.
THE WAY INN is played out in the anonymous and bizarre lobbies, corridors and concourses in which modern business life takes place. The Way Inn of the title is a global chain of identikit mid-budget hotels, and Neil Double, the novels protagonist, is a valued member of its loyalty scheme. Neil is a professional conference-goer, a man who will attend trade fairs, expos and conventions so you don't have to. It's a life of budget travel, inexpensive suits and out-of-town exhibition centres. This would be hell for most people, but its a kind of paradise for Neil, who has turned his incognito professional life into a toxic and selfish personal philosophy.
But Neil is about to change not least because he finds himself, for the first time in his adult life, willing himself to engage with somebody of the opposite sex as a human being rather than as a one-night sexual fling. In a brand new Way Inn in an airport hinterland, he meets a woman a woman he has seen before in bizarre and unsettling circumstances. She hints at being in possession of an astonishing truth about this mundane world. And then she disappears. Fascinated, and with his professional and personal life unravelling, Neil tries to find the woman again. In doing so he is drawn into the appalling secret that lurks behind the fake smiles and muzak of the hotel
Wiles, a design and architecture journalist, has a magnificent sense of comic timing but also a handy way with sudden violence. As Double'slife begins to unravel under the weight of new revelations, even a clock radio seems to develop an ominous consciousness The Way Inn is Terence Conran meets HP Lovecraft. It is Bulgakov staged in the Tate, Kafka as a new Ikea furniture range. Wiles writes beautiful prose, stages exquisitely painful set-piece scenes of high comedy, and in Neil Double has created a John Self for the Marriott generation. The Way Inn is funny, clever and thrilling, its central conceit disturbing enough to demand that you read it outside, if you can. Lloyd Shepherd, Guardian
Chilling The twisted novelty of the central idea is neat and memorable. Sunday Times
An ingenious and smartly funny novel Harry Ritchie, Daily Mail
A follow-up to last years Care Of Wooden Floors, taking a simple premise a businessman staying in a chain of bland hotels and horrifyingly turning it on its head. Itll make your skin crawl Shortlist
Praise for Care of Wooden Floors:
Funny and richly poetica surreal, farcical, original first novel The Times Books of the Year
A very funny novel combining schadenfreude and belly laughs. Independent
A terrific first novel, written with a very engaging deadpan wit, and an understated sense of the absurd. Kate Saunders, The Times
Ingenious his story has something in common, in terms of manic sensitivity, with Edgar Allan Poes The Tell-Tale Heart[with] deft and precise descriptive asides. This is a smart and polished debut. Daily Telegraph
This novel acquires the queasy allure of a cliff edge, the sense of impending catastrophe becoming strangely compelling Addictive and rather clever, too. Daily Mail
Funny, beguiling and quietly profound; a wonderfully well-crafted debut. TLS
Will Wiles was born in India in 1978. He lives in London and writes about architecture and design for a variety of magazines. He is the author of three novels, including Care of Wooden Floors and The Way Inn, all published by 4th Estate. The Way Inn was shortlisted for The Encore Award and Care of Wooden Floors won a Betty Trask Award.