The Golden Trap by Hugh Pentecost
 Friday, September 27, 2013 at 10:26AM
Friday, September 27, 2013 at 10:26AM 
First published in 1967; published by MysteriousPress.com/Open Road on September 25, 2012
Although it was first published in 1967, The Golden Trap doesn't feel  dated (except that a suite in a New York hotel can no longer be had for  $50). It is the fourth in a series of twenty-two novels that prolific  author Judson Phillips, writing as Hugh Pentecost, set in the Beaumont,  New York's finest luxury hotel. The Golden Trap could be called a "hotel  procedural," an interesting variation on the police procedural with  hotel personnel playing the detective roles. The behind-the-scenes look  it offers into hotel management is convincing and the detailed  atmosphere is realistic.
Mark Haskell handles public relations  for the Beaumont. The day John Smith is shot dead in suite B on the  tenth floor is a busy one for Haskell. While Haskell is helping a  wealthy cougar named Marilyn VanZandt organize a charity ball, George  Lovelace checks in. Marilyn recognizes him as a former lover. Lovelace, a  man of many names and nationalities, claims Marilyn is mistaken. We  soon learn that someone has been trying for months to kill Lovelace and  that the killer has tracked him to the hotel. Fortunately for Lovelace,  his best friend is Pierre Chambrun, the hotel's manager. Chambrun  resolves to keep Lovelace alive and enlists the help of Haskell and  Jerry Dodd, the Beaumont's head of security.
In the tradition of  "red herring" mystery plots, several guests are staying at the Beaumont  who might have reason to welcome Lovelace's demise. It is an improbable  coincidence that so many people from around the world who have reason to  kill Lovelace are staying in the same New York hotel at the same time,  but it is a forgivable coincidence because it makes the story better.  Lovelace's chance meeting with Marilyn is improbable enough -- of all  the gin joints ... er, hotels in New York, she happens to be in the  Beaumont just when Lovelace checks in -- but again, the coincidence is  central to the romance that drives a key subplot and I was willing to  accept it for the sake of enjoying the story.
The novel's most  intriguing question is whether Lovelace is worth protecting. He sees  himself as a patriot who killed to protect his country. Others see him  as a trigger-happy gunslinger who left an unnecessary trail of bodies in  his wake ... or as something even worse. The truth is concealed for  most of the novel, leaving the reader (and the hotel staff) to wonder  whether Lovelace deserves empathy or death.
The solution to the  mystery is clever. Enough clues are planted to give an astute reader a  chance to identify the killer (as a less than astute reader, I didn't  solve the mystery). Characters are sharply defined. Pentecost's prose  style is capable and professional: it never soars but it doesn't get in  the way of the story. While there is nothing truly remarkable about The  Golden Trap, there's also nothing to dislike about it. It is a solid,  enjoyable murder mystery with elements of a spy thriller and a dash of  romance that encourages the reader care about the characters.
RECOMMENDED
Reader Comments