Publisher's Weekly Review
In this somewhat clunky prequel to her bestselling Hollows urban fantasy series, Harrison (The Operator) goes back to the 1960s to depict the drastic event known as the Turn. Elf Trisk Cambri yearns for success and glory as a geneticist but is overlooked due to her gender; when given a chance to work on a human-led project as an industrial spy, she accepts it, taking the opportunity to help perfect a tomato that could change the world. When her rival, fellow elf Trent "Kal" Kala-mack, sabotages the project, he inadvertently unleashes a plague that wipes out a billion humans (to which the survivors' reaction is weirdly understated) and threatens the rest, only sparing the supernatural races hiding in plain sight. Now Trisk and her fellow Inderlanders must somehow stop the plague and save the world without revealing their true natures. While chronicling the collapse of civilization and the rise of the supernatural races, Harrison focuses on industrial espionage and science, in contrast to the romance-heavy books that follow; this one does have a forced romance plot between Trisk and Kal, but it's hard to view an unintentional mass killer as a romantic hero. It's a fantasy that feels more like a thriller, set in a 1960s that doesn't entirely ring true, and crammed full of appearances and cameos by numerous familiar characters. It works well as fan service but relies heavily on the rest of the series to give its events meaning. Agent: Richard Curtis, Richard Curtis Associates. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Harrison brings readers to where the world of her Hollows series began. It is 1963, and Inderlanders, supernatural beings, exist on a plane just outside most of humanity. The Elves must find a way to get past the mystery of the harrowing extinction of their species. Three budding geneticists Drs. Trisk Cambri, Trenton Kalamack (Kal), and Daniel Plank work with Daniel's human experimental formula to find a way. Kal originally comes to spy on Trisk (they are both Elves). In a fit of jealousy, he binds the formula to the everyday tomato, causing a sickness that goes global affecting Inderlander food supplies as well. Soon, the Vampires are hunting openly, the Witches are using magick without thought of who sees them, and the Weres are fighting the other species in their true form. The Inderlanders' secret is too close to the surface for comfort. Can Trisk and Kal put aside their petty schoolyard quarrels to keep the peace and get the races to simmer down? Can magick and science coexist?--Austin, Tiffany Copyright 2017 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Those familiar with Harrison's "Hollows" series know that the supernatural community came out of the proverbial closet owing to a worldwide pandemic that killed millions of humans. The story of how that crisis kicked off in the 1960s is told here. Ambitious elf geneticist Trisk, who is trying to get respect from her male counterparts, takes a position in a human-run lab, hiding her true nature as she develops a virus that she hopes will one day save her people. Her plans go awry when longtime rival Trent "Kal" Kalamack shows up at her lab, intending to discredit her work. Fans will clamor for this prequel and will enjoy the cameos from some series regulars, including demon Aliagarept. They should be prepared for some sluggish pacing, however, and a heroine who makes some frustratingly bad choices. VERDICT Even with these drawbacks, it will leave longtime readers with an immediate desire to reread the main series.-MM © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.