At Bertram's Hotel Summary & Study Guide

This Study Guide consists of approximately 30 pages of chapter summaries, quotes, character analysis, themes, and more - everything you need to sharpen your knowledge of At Bertram's Hotel.

At Bertram's Hotel Summary & Study Guide

This Study Guide consists of approximately 30 pages of chapter summaries, quotes, character analysis, themes, and more - everything you need to sharpen your knowledge of At Bertram's Hotel.
This section contains 1,012 words
(approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page)
Buy the At Bertram's Hotel Study Guide

At Bertram's Hotel Summary & Study Guide Description

At Bertram's Hotel Summary & Study Guide includes comprehensive information and analysis to help you understand the book. This study guide contains the following sections:

This detailed literature summary also contains Topics for Discussion and a Free Quiz on At Bertram's Hotel by Agatha Christie.

At Bertram's Hotel is a novel by famed mystery author, Agatha Christie. This novel features one of Ms. Christie's beloved characters, Miss Jane Marple. Miss Marple is staying at a London hotel, Bertram's, as a gift from a niece. While there, Miss Marple begins noticing unusual things involving the staff and guests, especially the notorious Lady Bess Sedgwick. At the same time, Chief Inspector Davy is investigating several brazen robberies that seem to include a small connection to Bertram's. As the two detectives compare notes, it soon becomes clear that Bertram's is a front for a large criminal syndicate. At Bertram's Hotel is another fast paced, well plotted novel by one of the world's best mystery writers that will leave the reader guessing who done it until the end.

Miss Marple arrives at Bertram's Hotel in London and meets an old acquaintance in the lobby. As the two ladies catch up, Miss Marple notices how often her friend mistakes guests walking through the hotel for other people. Miss Marple puts this down to old age. At this same time, Miss Marple and her friend watch as the notorious Lady Bess Sedgwick enters the hotel. Miss Marple is aware of Lady Sedgwick from multiple newspaper articles that have discussed Lady Sedgwick's escapades over the years. Lady Sedgwick appears to enjoy scandal, having left her husband for another man years before, and indulging in such behavior as working with the resistance during the war, flying airplanes, and driving fast cars. The latest rumors have Lady Sedgwick involved with a famous race car driver.

Lady Sedgwick goes upstairs to her room and a few minutes later Miss Marple decides to go to her own room. As Miss Marple approaches the elevator, Lady Sedgwick appears once more. However, Lady Sedgwick sees something in the lobby that causes her a moment of uncertainty. Miss Marple turns and watches as a young woman and a middle-aged woman enter the hotel. Miss Marple is struck by the resemblance between the girl and Lady Sedgwick. Miss Marple turns back to the elevator and finds that Lady Sedgwick has reboarded the car, claiming to have forgotten something upstairs.

Miss Marple spends the next few days shopping for household linens. While at the Army and Navy stores, dining in the restaurant there, Miss Marple sees Lady Sedgwick having an intense conversation with the famous race car driver, Ladislaus Malinowski. Miss Marple walks near their table and pretends to drop her purse in order to hear their conversation, but is able to hear very little. A few days later, Miss Marple sees Mr. Malinowski again, this time in deep conversation with the young woman from Bertram's, Elvira Blake. Miss Marple is left with the impression that Elvira is very much in love with Mr. Malinowski.

As Miss Marple is enjoying her vacation, the police are looking into several daring robberies that have taken place in and around London over the past year or so. Chief Inspector Davy attends a meeting in which all the detectives on the various cases compare notes. Chief Inspector Davy, or Father as everyone calls him, notices a connection between several persons seen near the robberies and Bertram's Hotel. When, a few days later, a guest of Bertram's is reported missing, Father takes advantage of the situation to do some nosing around the hotel. Father speaks to the manager and desk clerk, as well as several guests, attempting to learn all he can about the hotel and the missing guest. Miss Marple is able to tell Father that she saw the missing man leave his room in the middle of the night the day he went missing.

Father continues his investigation, learning that two known criminals, brothers, are the true owners of the hotel. Father also investigates the backgrounds of the employees and learns several of them have criminal pasts while others are actors. A theory begins to form in Father's mind, so he returns to the hotel to do some more snooping. Father speaks to Miss Marple again and she tells him about the conversation she overheard between Elvira and Mr. Malinowski. As they speak, they both hear gunshots out in front of the hotel. Father rushes outside to find Elvira screaming for help and the commissionaire dead. Elvira claims that someone has tried to kill her and that this is the third time it has happened.

Elvira settles into a suite at Bertram's with her mother, Lady Bess Sedgwick, while Father continues to investigate the hotel as well as the murder. Father asks both Miss Marple and the missing guest, who has since turned up, to reenact the night the man disappeared. Miss Marple looks out into the hallway much as she did that night as the man, Canon Pennyfather, walks away much the way she claims to have seen him do that night. However, Miss Marple is convinced the man she saw, although he looked like Pennyfather, was not him. Father agrees, suggesting that someone was pretending to be Pennyfather in order to participate in a train robbery that very night.

Father and Miss Marple sit down with Lady Bess Sedgwick and tell her that they know she is the mastermind behind the robberies and that she used the Bertram Hotel as cover. They also suggest that Lady Sedgwick's lover, Mr. Malinowski, killed the commissionaire because he was legally Lady Sedgwick's husband from a youthful incident that was never legally cleared up. Father claims the commissionaire was blackmailing Lady Sedgwick. Lady Sedgwick denies that Mr. Malinowski killed the commissionaire, but instead claims she did it. Then Lady Sedgwick escapes the room through a window and jumps into her car, dying a few moments later in a crash. Lady Sedgwick's confession is binding, but both Father and Miss Marple know she did not kill the commissionaire. Elvira Blake killed the man out of a belief that he might be able to stand between her and her inheritance because of his marriage to her mother. However, they have no evidence, and therefore cannot prosecute.

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This section contains 1,012 words
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