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Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Book Review for The Harvey Girls by Juliette Fay

 

The Harvey Girls by Juliette Fay

Published:  August 12, 2025 by Gallery Books

Genre:  Historical Fiction, Coming of Age

Taken from Goodreads:  Juliette Fay—known for her “well-drawn characters and vibrant historical backdrops” (Library Journal)—transports us to 1920s America with this big-hearted tale of two very different women who must learn to trust each other as one tries to save her family and the other to save herself. Perfect for fans of Kristin Hannah and Kristina McMorris.

1926: Charlotte Crowninshield was born into one of the finest Boston society families. Now she’s on the run from a brutal husband, desperate to disappear into the wilds of the Southwest. Billie MacTavish is the oldest of nine children born to Scottish immigrants in Nebraska. She quit school in the sixth grade to help with her mother’s washing and mending business, but even that isn’t enough to keep the family afloat.

Desperate, both women join the ranks of the Harvey Girls, waitresses who serve in America’s first hospitality chain on the Santa Fe railroad. Hired on the same day, they share three things: a room, a heartfelt dislike of each other…and each has a secret that will certainly get them fired.

Through twelve-hour days of training in Topeka, Kansas, they learn the fine art of service, perfecting their skills despite bouts of homesickness, fear of being discovered, and a run-in with the KKK. When they’re sent to work at the luxurious El Tovar hotel at the Grand Canyon, the challenges only grow, as Billie struggles to hide her young age from would-be suitors, and Charlotte discovers the little-known dark side of the national park’s history.

My Thoughts:  Juliette Fay is a must-read author.   Every book of hers that I have read is my new favorite.   I rave about it to my fellow historical fiction readers and then cannot wait for them to read the book so we can talk about it.  

The Harvey Girls is a story about girls who work at restaurants on the train route.   This book is about 2 girls who are working for different reasons.   Billie needs to send money back to her family and Charlotte (great name) is hiding from an abusive husband.   I enjoyed that the characters were developed enough so that I felt like I knew them.   I could feel their sadness at missing their families, celebrate their successes, and cheer them on when they were struggling.  

Thank you Gallery Books for a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review.

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Meet the Author (taken from her website):  Born in Binghamton, New York, Juliette and her family soon moved to Massachusetts where poor television reception fueled her love of books. Haunting the local library for favorites like The Boxcar Children and Julie of the Wolves, she nurtured a happily nerdish interior life.

Juliette graduated from Boston College with a double major in human development and theology, which qualified her for thinking deeply about the state of humanity, but not for much else. She joined the Jesuit Volunteer Corps and worked at an emergency shelter in Seattle, Washington, started a day care for homeless families, and volunteered at children’s ward in a Guatemalan hospital for the poor. Returning to Boston, she taught at a school for autistic children.

After receiving a degree in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, she worked at the state child abuse prevention agency and ran a parenting education program. While all of these jobs gave her even more fodder for ruminating on the state of humanity, none of them paid very well, and she waitressed a lot to shore up her often laughable income.

Along the way, she married Tom Fay, a former Jesuit Volunteer who continued to be smart, kind, funny, and dashingly handsome long after his volunteer days were over, and they had four children. Juliette assumed a return to government work lay in her future; however, fate intervened when she read a really bad book. It made her wonder if she couldn’t do a little better—if she could just commit to paper the stories that ran in her head like movie marathons. She began tapping away at her computer while the younger kids napped, between the fights over who pinched who first, and at night after the older kids had wrestled their homework to the ground.

Juliette’s first published novel, Shelter Me, was designated as one of the ten best works of fiction in 2009 by the Massachusetts Center for the Book, an affiliate of the Library of Congress. It was named to the Indie Next List of the American Booksellers Association, chosen as one of six novels for Target’s 2009 Bookmarked Club, and was a Good Housekeeping featured Book Pick. Deep Down True was short-listed for the 2011 Women’s Fiction Award of the American Library Association. The Shortest Way Home was named to Library Journal’s Top 5 Best Books of 2012: Women’s Fiction. The Tumbling Turner Sisters was a USA Today bestseller and the Costco Pennie’s Book Club Pick in January 2017.  City of Flickering Light was published 2019, and Catch Us When We Fall in 2021, and The Half of It in 2023. Her work has been translated into Polish, German, Portuguese (Portugal), Portuguese (Brazil), Hungarian, Italian, Turkish, and Slovak.


What others are saying…

 

“Juliette Fay’s gift for creating complex, exquisitely human characters” (Marisa de los Santos, New York Times bestselling author) is on full display in this deeply moving and joyous celebration of female empowerment, loyalty, and friendship.

"Fay brings to life a fascinating piece of jazz-age history through the lens of two women who, at first glance, appear to have nothing in common besides their jobs at a fast-paced restaurant chain that was once ubiquitous. The novel crackles with secrets while also highlighting the struggles of women trying to make their way in an unforgiving world."

—Fiona Davis, New York Times bestselling author of The Stolen Queen

 

"THE HARVEY GIRLS is a heartwarming, satisfying read centering on two well-drawn characters from opposite sides of the track. As Billie and Charlotte seek one of the few opportunities for security and independence for women in the 1920s at the Harvey Hotels and railway service, their eyes are opened to a side of America they've never experienced. As an unlikely friendship forms, their loyalty--and their views of who they are as people--is tested. Compulsively readable and immersive, Fay writes another winner!"

–Heather Webb, USA Today bestselling author of Queens of London

 

"Set against the sweeping backdrop of 1920s America, The Harvey Girls shines a light on a little-known chapter of women’s history with warmth and insight. Juliette Fay brings to life the world of railroad hospitality with rich period detail, illuminating how two women from vastly different backgrounds forge a path forward in a rapidly changing country. This is historical fiction at its most transportive—grounded, vivid, and unexpectedly moving.”

– New York Times bestselling author Christina Baker Kline

 

"Fay’s enjoyable yet convoluted tale of friendship, love, and tribulations, set mostly in the breathtaking Grand Canyon area, is an intriguing look into the world of the Harvey Girls, with a well-developed plot and characters that bring the era to life."

– Library Journal, starred review

 

“The Harvey Girls may be Juliette Fay’s best historical novel to date, full of unforgettable women, juicy conflict, and fascinating facts about an underexplored chapter in the history of the American West. A must-read.”

–Greer Macallister, bestselling author of The Thirteenth Husband and The Arctic Fury

 

“THE HARVEY GIRLS is Juliette Fay at her very best: a gorgeously written, impeccably-researched novel filled with resilient and beautifully drawn female characters. Billie and Charlotte will capture readers’ hearts and bring them back in time to a true and fascinating historical piece of the west in this powerful story of female friendship, strength, and ultimately love.”

– Jillian Cantor, USA Today bestselling author of Beautiful Little Fools

 

 

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