Eileen Stevens brings a warm, approachable tone to everything from business manifestos to YA fantasy. Her narration of Jason Fried's Rework and It Doesn't Have to Be Crazy at Work strikes the right balance between conversational and authoritative — she makes productivity advice feel like common sense rather than a lecture. On the fiction side, Frost Like Night and Six Weeks to Live showcase her ability to build tension and emotional stakes. Stevens has a bright, clear voice with a natural friendliness that puts listeners at ease quickly. She reads with good pace and does not over-emote, trusting the material to do its work. Listeners who want a narrator equally comfortable in the self-help aisle and the fiction shelves will appreciate her reliable, engaging style.
by Monica Wood
Narrated by Eileen Stevens
Violet Powell emerges from twenty-two years in prison to find solace in a book club with elderly Lorraine Daigle. Eileen Stevens captures both characters' vulnerability as literature becomes their bridge across generational and experiential divides.
Snow Like Ashes • Book 3
by Sara Raasch
Narrated by Kate Rudd, Nick Podehl, Eileen Stevens
With Angra alive and his Decay spreading, Meira desperately seeks to control her magic while the world crumbles around her. The multiple narrators effectively handle the climactic final volume's shifting perspectives and intense emotions.
by Marlo Thomas, Phil Donahue
Narrated by Marlo Thomas, Phil Donahue, Tom Zingarelli, Maggi-Meg Reed, Therese Plummer, Adam Verner, Ryan Vincent Anderson, Robin Miles, Eileen Stevens, Sean Patrick Hopkins
by Catherine McKenzie
Narrated by Alex Allwine, Eileen Stevens, Julia Whelan, Caitlin Davies
Multiple narrators bring Jennifer's fractured world to life as she races against a terminal diagnosis to uncover who poisoned her. The ensemble cast makes you feel the claustrophobia of her collapsing timeline and tangled family secrets.
by Liz Arch
Narrated by Eileen Stevens
by Amy Cuddy
Narrated by Nidhi Tewari MSW LCSW, Eileen Stevens
Cuddy challenges traditional work-life separation advice, arguing for attunement — deeper workplace connections that make colleagues feel genuinely seen and valued.