
Member Reviews

Beautifully haunting and subtly magical, The Listeners takes Maggie Stiefvater’s signature voice and applies it to an entirely new setting and story.
The Avallon lives and dies on the whim of the sweetwater, and June Hudson is the one responsible for keeping it afloat. A woman with a strong Virginia accent in 1942 is not someone anyone expects to find running one of the most luxurious hotels in the country, and yet June does exactly that. After saving one of the Gilfoyle children when only a child herself, June becomes almost a part of their family and is raised to take over the running of the hotel - something some of the Gilfoyles are less than happy about, but not for the reason you’d think. When WWII breaks out, June is informed that her hotel is required to play host to some political adversaries however, as tensions rise, keeping the sweetwater sweet may become harder than she thinks, to the detriment of them all.
The Listeners is unlike anything I’ve ever read by Maggie Stiefvater and yet it gripped me immediately. I’m not generally a big reader of historical fiction, but as someone who loves both the Shiver and Raven Cycle series, I wanted to give it a shot, and I was swept away.
June was such a compelling character, pulled between the hotel and employees she cares for deeply and the family she was in some ways a huge part of and in other ways completely outside. Her various employees all came together to provide a tableau of daily life in a luxury hotel, and all added to the worldbuilding in a multitude of ways.
The relationships were messy and honest, the realities of life in a time period where everyone is struggling and scared.
I loved the quietly creepy and somewhat menacing presence of the sweetwater - it was almost a character in and of itself - with the power to both keep the hotel and spa famous and also destroy everything on a whim.
Overall, I would highly recommend The Listeners. If you’re a fan of Stiefvater’s YA books it won’t necessarily feel familiar, but it has that same entrancing mystery I always love in her books.

Magical realism, historical fantasy set in a luxury hotel during the early 1940s
Following the attack on Pearl Harbour, diplomats, their families, journalists and others connected to Axis countries, are rounded up and held in hotels while the government try work out what to do with them.
The Avallon, famed for it's luxury and quality must kick out it's guests and replace them with these unwanted interlopers, along with the government agents and border guards sent to keep them in check. The staff have family fighting, some have lost loved ones already, and many a gradually conscripted - but June Hudson, the general manager, is determined that these new guests receive the same care as any other. In fact, it's vital that tempers are kept calm, or risk the sweetwater, that flow through the hotel, turning sour.
I'm really not sure how to either rate or review this one. I enjoyed everything that I was reading - I liked the setting; the magical realism; the characters and their relationships; the look at class, privilege and belonging. But I also found it all a bit vague, like a watercolour when I wanted something HD. It doesn't lack substance, I just wanted more solidity and the characters needed more depth and reality to them in order for me to form a connect and care about them.
Even saying all of that, Maggie Stiefvater really knows how to create an interesting, otherworldly setting that seeps into your skin and I'll be thinking about the Avallon for a while yet.

The Listeners is a historical fiction novel set in the 1940s with a pinch of magical realism.
June is the general manager of the Avallon Hotel and currently preparing the hotel for a lush Burns Night spectacle when the US government commandeers the hotel for the housing of foreign diplomats from Axis countries. It's refreshing to see a woman in a managerial role at that time and Stiefvater manages to write her FMC very convincingly. FBI agent Tucker Minnow seems equally intriguing, but the reader only learns more about his backstory once he and June start to get to know each other better. Naturally, there is a lot of staff at the hotel that makes for interesting secondary characters.
Although I liked seeing this time period from a non-European perspective and in a non-EU setting, I never really got into the story. Maybe it was the slower pace, maybe it was the magical realism element that I wish had either been left out entirely, or had been more "fleshed out". Or maybe, having read Stiefvater's YA work, I had too high expectations.
I recommend this to anyone who likes slower paced stories set at the time of WWII but not in a combat situation.

Trying to review a Stiefvater book is like trying to describe what it means to feel something. You can, but it’s better for the person to experience it firsthand, there’s an ineffable quality that must be had. It won’t be the same for you and me.
Based on true events from WW2 and luxury resorts, The Listeners adds a bit of magic that allows a heightened sense to rise and allows us to see the spaces between events. The ancient and mystical mountains of West Virginia provide the perfect backdrop to a story of opposing powers, loyalty, and defying expectation. The true magic in the pages is unpacking humanity through choices, good and bad, and seeing the courses that follow—defining humanity by how humans wield the power they’ve been given. It is a story of longing and hope and waiting and listening. But what you listen to makes all the difference.
I love the setting, though I am biased. The characters are ones you might expect, but expect to learn them inside and out. It’s a story about a hotel and a war and the people who are working to keep their families and nation safe. It’s a story about perception and reality and how you can’t always tell one from the other. It’s a story about hidden truths and the ones staring you in the face.

Compelling, mysterious and subtle, The Listeners hooked me in slowly and didn't let me go.
For the first 25% of this book, I couldn't decide if it was for me or not. Suddenly, I was 80% through without realising. I guess it was for me after all!
The Listeners isn't fast or flashy. It's slow and meandering, much like the sweetwater running beneath the hotel. It's a very human story, rooted firmly in real history, where the characters really shine.

I was a little worried when my request for The Listeners was approved, because I love Maggie's work so much, but as a rule I don't consume anything set around WWII: I was concerned that I had boxed myself into a disappointment. I am happy to report this was an unfounded concern. Maggie Stiefvater has been one of my favourite authors since teenagehood, when her werewolf series, The Wolves of Mercy Falls, captured my imagination. I have read, since then, almost everything she has published, and every new book has convinced me of her skill, but more than that, of the ineffable sense of person-ness she is capable of putting to page, it is almost magic. The Raven Cycle, an utter stand out, remains my benchmark for humanity played out on pages, for the melding of the real and unreal, but The Listeners might give TRC a run for its money.
The Listeners is delightful and compelling, in her interview with The Bookseller Maggie referred to this not as fantasy, or historical fiction, but 'Wonder' a new genre she was pioneering, and I understand now what she meant. This is unlike anything you have read before, because it is fantasy, and reality. It is class struggles. It is a WWII narrative. It is a romance, and a family drama, and rumination on parenthood and childhood. It is horror, without the fear, and literary without the pretension, and historical fiction without the familiar, and a tale of people without banality. It is almost spy fiction, and almost romance fiction, and almost fantasy fiction. It is speculative, but it is also deeply, unerringly real.
I fell into this, dove into the sweetwater and let it close over my head. It was a fever dream. Consuming. Brilliant. Truly exceptional.
To quote Maggie herself: Stiefvater, 'You incredible creature.'
5 stars.

It took me a few pages to get into this, but after that there was no looking back, I was absolutely hooked. I've not read anything like it. I knew what happened to those who were persona-non-grata in the UK during the war but hadn't ever considered those in the States. The little touch of magic from the water adds another layer and the individual stories are lovely. All in all, this is a fabulous book.

Very, very slow. Unfortunately I didn't really enjoy this book even though I thought it would be a good read. I struggled through to the end and was glad that I've now finished it. My thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for giving me the opportunity to read this book in return for an honest review.

I feel awful because I wished for this one and had it granted by the publisher, but I couldn't finish this one. There's slow and then there's 'The Listeners' slow, which feels like wading through treacle while covered in honey. The concept, some of the writing, I was really intrigued in that, but things moved at such a snails pace, involving so many people with so little distinction that I just couldn't force myself beyond the first couple of chapters. I don't know if this is the kind of book that I'd do better with in audio, but as a print book, I couldn't stomach such a slow pacing with so little happening.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an advance copy of this book.
I had never heard of this author and I must not have read the blurb correctly because I expected the book to be a spy thriller with perhaps some relationship to the Walter De La Mare poem The Listeners. I didn't notice any of the "dark alliances and unexpected desires" mentioned in the blurb.
I can't say I loved the book but I was intrigued by parts of it and it has popped into my mind at unexpected times. The idea of the sweetwater is very interesting indeed and I would have liked to have known more about it, what happens when it turns and how some people are able to prevent this.
I also found many aspects of the book to be quite annoying so at least it has provoked a reaction which is better than a bland "meh" sort of book.
In the beginning the book is written in that breezy American way of introducing and reintroducing a character by their full name and giving the same fact about them. I find that annoying rather than cute, I don't know how many times we are told that those dachshunds were 1 wiry and 2 smooth coated - maybe that has some meaning or relevance that I failed to see but if not, who cares about the dogs' coats?
I was also very irritated by "Avallon", i know it is a place in France but I think most readers would expect "Avalon" as in King Arthur and every time I saw "Avallon" it broke my flow (no sweetwater pun intended lol). The book supposedly explains how June became Hoss but I still did not understand until I googled the word.
June was never really substantial or vivid for me, in fact none of the characters seemed particularly real and in a sense some of them weren't. Actually, it has only now occurred to me why June is insubstantial - she is a sponge. A sponge for the water and a sponge for the mentoring by old Mr Francis who, frankly sounded like a dreadful, lecturing know all, interesting also that his motives for helping June advance were not quite as kindly as June thought.
I did not like the descriptions of the extent to which the staff in the Avallon usually pandered to their rich guests although this prompted me to think about when service becomes servility so that was interesting for me..

I don't doubt that this is a wonderful, touching and magical book. I just know that I won't be able to appreciate this book at the moment. My mind is not healthy enough for that. My mind can't focus enough for that. I read the first 21% of the story and there are a lot of names and a lot of descriptions and in true Stiefvater fashion those are all very atmospheric and layered. I however noticed that I couldn't keep up. And that's for sure more of a me issue than a book issue. The concept is interesting and I am quite curious where it will go. I just can't appreciate this right now. I saw that a Dutch translation will be published soon though. I might try that one once it's available through Kobo+.

The Listeners by Maggie Stiefvater is a genre blending book that mixes historical fiction with a hint of magical realism to create a novel that will linger long after the last page has turned. In the Appalachian Mountains in 1942, the Avallon Hotel is synonymous with luxury, comfort and wealth, something that the staff, led by manager, and local woman, June (Hoss) Hudson, and the owners, the wealth Gilfoyle family, pride themselves upon. However in the aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbour, war and austerity loom large and the future of a luxury hotel is questionable at best, that is until it becomes host to a variety of diplomats from enemy nations, their families and other Nazi sympathizers, all under the watchful eye of the State Department and Agent Tucker Minnick in particular. June and her staff must learn to deal with their new guests, several of whom have secrets of their own that they are trying to hide, and the adversarial relationship between June and Agent Tucker certainly isn't helping matters. The fact that Minnick has secrets of his own is something that June quickly figures out, and we soon learn that this pair may have more in common than either is willing to admit. On top of all of this, there is something strange about the waters of the hotel spa, something magical that absorbs the energy of those around it, and given the change in clientele it may become more harmful than healing.
There is an excellent blend of historical fiction, mystery, magic and romance in this book, making it something that I would happily recommend to a variety of readers. I am not always a fan of magical realism, but done well as it has been here, and incorporated into the storytelling with a light touch it can add an nice extra dimension to the story being told. Speaking of storytelling, Stiefvater is a master, keeping me turning pages as she wove a tale that kept me turning pages, desperate to see what would happen to the fascinating characters she crafted to populate her world. June of course is compelling as the main character, something of an enigma at first, but memorable and clearly very special from the first time we are introduced to her - 'She was not outrageous but she was confident, and in this room, the two concepts felt the same.' but my personal favourite character was Hannelore, the daughter of the German Cultural Attaché, non speaking but incredibly observant when it comes to the hotel and its occupants, her possible fate if she returned to Germany was one of the most heartbreaking aspects of the book.
There is a romance in the story, and like much of the book overall it is slow and meandering but when it finally comes to the crux it is also absolutely beautiful - " I want to be what makes you smile when we come home to each other and I want to be what makes you settle under a full moon and I want to be what makes you wild when I am gone ... and I want to be everything else in between " 'She did not want just him, she wanted the person she was with him.'
As I said earlier there is a thread of magical realism running through the book, but I think that readers looking for this in particular might be a little disappointed, it is not as developed as it possibly could have been.
It is clear that the author has done a lot of historical research, especially after reading her notes at the end of the book, and as someone who loves history I appreciated the attention to detail and how she wove the history into the fiction, and the often beautifully descriptive writing, but that did come at the expense of pace, this is a book that needs a reader that is willing to go along with the ride, willing to detour here and there and trust that it will be worth it in the end, and for me it really was.
I read and reviewed an ARC courtesy of NetGalley and the publisher, all opinions are my own.

This book felt like coming full circle.
Maggie Stiefvater was one of the first authors I ever read in English, and getting the chance to read an ARC of The Listeners felt like stepping back into that quiet, powerful kind of magic she does so well.
Set in 1942 West Virginia, the story follows June Porter Hudson, manager of the once-luxurious Avallon Hotel, now secretly housing Axis diplomats as prisoners of war. What unfolds is a quiet, intricate story about appearances, grief, and the cost of maintaining the illusion of perfection—because above all, Avallon must be "the best."
The pacing is slow, intentionally so. The magic—like the sweetwater running beneath the hotel—is subtle but always there, gently shaping the world and its people without ever taking center stage.
What moved me most was the human weight behind every decision. The women serving the very men whose nations sent their sons to die. The men assisting guests they may face on the battlefield. The cold language of war—casualty numbers, battle stats—contrasted with the deeply personal pain of a single name on a list. For generals, it matters if fewer than 100 men died. For mothers, it only matters if their son was among them.
This novel isn’t an action-packed wartime thriller. It’s a meditation. A hallway of echoes. The front door to something much larger—historically and emotionally. I closed the book and immediately opened a history textbook to revisit Pearl Harbor. Few novels make me do that.
The Listeners is about seeing and not being seen, knowing and pretending. And like the sweetwater, its magic lingers long after the final page.

It's 1942 and June Hudson is the General Manager of the Avallon Hotel and Spa in West Virginia, renowned for the restorative power of its sweetwater. Its previous owner has recently passed away when the State Department decides to use the luxury hotel to host enemy diplomats, nazi sympathisers and their dependants...
The writing in this book is beautiful and evocative, with the right amount of humour to balance out what could have been a very depressing story. I liked the characters and the setting, and the fact that Stiefvater has done her historical research shows on every page (it inspired me down a Wikipedia rabbit hole as soon as I finished). I'd describe it as historical magical realism, and an explaration of why people do what they do in wartime.
Where it fell a bit flat for me is the plot and pacing. This book is incredibly slow and meandering - it feels a bit like the author has so many interesting things she wants to tell us about history that she neglects to tell an actual story (to be fair, they are actually interesting things). It's not until the last quarter of the book or so that much actually happens.
Overall, I'd say the Listeners is a well-written and well-researched book, but it will not be for everyone. Skip it if you're mostly plot-driven. Pick it up if you're motivated by beautifully atmospheric writing and learning about an often overlooked aspect of WWII history.
Many thanks to Headline for granting my wish and letting me read an eARC through Netgalley. All opinions are my own.

Every page is saturated with historical accuracy and testifies to Stiefvater's thorough research, but this attention to detail never overpowers the story and characters. From June to her staff (and dachshunds) to the FBI agents to the diplomat families, these feel like real people who have stepped out from the history books but with a subtle twist of magical influence.

I'm not entirely sure how I feel about this one. The prose is gorgeous and the characters are compelling, but it also felt a bit slow and cluttered at times.
It might throw off some people if they are acquainted with the author's previous YA books, but as someone who's new to her work i thought it was pretty good. Perhaps not right for my current thrill-seeking mood, but good all the same.

This is a very well-written historical novel about a luxurious hotel in the Appalachian mountains in the 1940s. It was a little dark for my tastes, but it was an original concept with interesting characters at its heart.

June Hudson ("Hoss") is the general manager of the Avallon hotel, a luxury hotel and spa in West Virginia. She caters to high profile guests, anticipating their every need, until in January 1942 she's asked (/told) to clear the hotel to make room for high profile German, Japanese and Italian diplomats, journalists and more, who are being detained in exchange for Americans captured in their countries. But the sweetwater that runs beneath and through the hotel
It was well written, well researched and the details of the characters are so fun - I loved June's character. There was something of a dry humour to much of it. But the best way to describe my relationship with this book is that we just didn't feel that spark.
I enjoyed seeing the inner workings of a hotel of this prestige and scale, especially run by a woman (of my age!) in this time period. And the magic and ever present threat of the sweetwater was promising. I would have liked more focus on the sweetwater, but I know that's not really what this book was about - it built an excellent backdrop for the magic of the mountains and June's childhood, but wasn't explored far enough. That's personal taste in books currently though I'd say!
The plot isn't a driving one - it's slow and meandering, sometimes it feels more like a collection of anecdotes with June and FBI agent Tucker connecting the narratives. There was beauty in the small, sometimes whimsical, sometimes eerie, details. I feel there's more beneath the narrative than what you read on the surface, but parts of the story dragged and didn't engage me well enough to pull all of those out.
I can see the amount of time, hard work and pure passion that went into this story. The author explains that it's not a true story, but that many of the anecdotes are pulled from the time period - crazy little things like an Italian man setting fire to his shoe where he'd smuggled hidden documents! I'd give it 3.5 stars; it's not 100% for me, but is a good book.
Thank you to Netgalley, the author and the publishers for a review copy of this book.

A stunning impactful book written in an almost hypnotic prose ,beautifully executed. Another triumph for Maggie Stiefvater, a new classic for my bookshelf.

📚review 📚
The Listeners - Maggie Stiefvater
I am not really sure where to begin with this one - it is sort of historical fiction but also sort of speculative? Like WWII is happening and there are nazis but also magical water and dachshounds that appear to be silent?
Basically, June is the general manager at a luxury hotel, which gets appropriated by the feds during WWII to house diplomats from countries they are at war with until they can be exchanged for American diplomats. Obviously, a person isn’t their government, but essentially we are watching the staff of this hotel wait on people who may have known about Pearl Harbour and many other atrocities of the war. As some of the hotel’s staff have already lost people in the war, I did feel like there could have been more tension between the characters but there was plenty of interesting food for thought about class and who is deserving of the luxury the hotel offers.
This was a very interesting premise and a very odd book - there was definitely plenty to like, the writing is beautiful and the conversations around the relationships between June and the family who own the hotel were interesting. Plus we had the slowest slow burn to ever slow burn, which scratched an itch I didn’t know I had. Honestly, I don’t really know what to say with this one, it’s one of those books where it feels like there is no plot, but also feels like it is all plot? I liked it… but I have no idea why or how we got here and sometimes, those are the best journeys to go on!
Thank you @netgalley for the early copy.
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