The Listeners ©2025 by Maggie Stiefvater was the selection this month for the Good Books club at my local library. It is set in West Virginia in the months following the bombing of Pearl Harbor during WWII. A very luxurious hotel is asked told to house diplomats from enemy countries as a holding type detention camp. Staff must serve the very people who may possibly responsible for the death or maiming of their loved ones. It is a powder keg type situation.
Intertwined throughout there was an air of fantasy flowing waters from springs at the hotel that seem to have healing or hurting powers. The water made me think of the plant Audrey II from musical Little Shop of Horrors and its insistence to "Feed me." Another idiosyncracy of the hotel was the abundance of live snails that abounded. The hotel had turned the (gross?) presence of the snails into a namesake signature, incorporating carvings of snails into pillars, on fountains, and along railings throughout. After reading the book I was curious about this snail oddity. Apparently, snails are very prevalent in West Virginia due to its climate and eco system. I even found a book published on this very snail topic.
There are currently 168 native land snail species confirmed from West Virginia, 11 of which are endemic (more than any neighboring state). Eighteen species are restricted to the borders of West Virginia and Virginia along the Ridge and Valley region.
If you would like a slow, closeup visual of snail activity, in addition to the book, check out this YouTube video.
There are more than 150 kinds of land snails in the “Wild and Wonderful” state, ranging from the size of a quarter to the size of a pinhead.
★★★☆☆ Better than average; not a waste of time


No comments:
Post a Comment