The listeners by Maggie Stiefvater

I loved Stiefvater’s standalone novel The Scorpio Races as well as the Raven Boys series and eagerly picked up The listeners her adult novel, which was so engrossing that I could not put it down, reading it in a couple of sittings.
January 1942. June Hudson is the General Manager of the Avallon Hotel & Spa, owned by the rich Gilfoyles. It has always been the height of luxury for its influential and powerful patrons. Set in the wilds of West Virginia, the sweetwater that runs from the mountains eases away the pain and troubles of its high society clientele. Then June is told that all its guests will have to leave and instead it will host three hundred diplomats and Nazi sympathisers, supervised by the FBI as part of the war effort. Many of June’s staff have friends and relatives already serving in the armed forces and she has the massive job of juggling their feelings while trying to keep her unwelcome guests happy. FBI Agent Tucker Minnick is there to listen to the diplomats’ secrets, but with an Appalachian past, he understands the threat of the sweetwater that flows beneath the hotel.
I loved the magic realism in The listeners. The sweetwater can harm as well as heal and must be kept happy for the guests at the hotel to be content and the sacrifice that June makes to keep everything on an even keel is gripping. Tucker understands the power of water, showing June the flow from his village, and recognises her true nature and what she is undertaking.
In the author’s notes Stiefvater discusses her historical sources relating that luxury hotels were taken over to house diplomats following the attack on Pearl Harbour. The description of the running of the luxurious hotel and the amount of work that is involved in providing for unwanted was fascinating and gave a depth to the novel. However it was the complexity of the characters that stood out for me. I gradually grew to know the inmates of the hotel very well. June is unusual, a woman managing a hotel, still retaining her Appalachian accent and Tucker has secrets from his past and ones from his career as an FBI agent. The heartrending plight of Hannelore, the little girl who does not speak and could face danger if deported to Nazi Germany with her parents is a thread that I followed eagerly, as well as that of Sandy Gilfoyle, also silent in a wheelchair.
There are twists and turns, surprises and romance making this a memorable and unique story. It is highly recommended.
Themes: Love, Lies, Secrets, Betrayal, World War 2, Hotels, Magic realism.
Pat Pledger