Reviews for Year one

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

When the world as they know it ends, the survivors of a mysterious plague are faced with a new world in which both dark and light magic are rising."When Ross MacLeod pulled the trigger and brought down the pheasant, he had no way of knowing he'd killed himself. And billions of others." So begins the latest novel from publishing juggernaut Roberts, and the rest of the book is just as gripping. When a virus takes out nearly 80 percent of the Earth's human population, the survivors must figure out how to live in their new world, which includes the appearance of a varied set of magical abilities in a large part of the surviving population. Both the magick and un-magick people have violent factions which are trying to vanquish internal and external enemies, and good people from both groups have to band together in order to stay safe and establish a new order that honors life and decency. In one such community, witches Lana and Max are having a child, and from the moment of conception, it's obvious that the child will be magical. As her pregnancy advances, Lana begins to suspect that even in the context of the new magical paradigm, her child has a special destiny, an impression that becomes clearer when she realizes she and her unborn child are being hunted. Finding sanctuary on a remote farm, Lana ushers the child into the world, and soon both foes and allies begin to arrive at her doorstep, deepening Lana's belief that her daughter is meant for something great and dangerous. Roberts' new direction is electric and ground-breaking. In some ways, it's a synthesis of her past work: she's often written about magical elements, familyboth biological and emotionaland community. In this series launch, she's created a believable apocalypse that is obviously leading to a grand showdown between good and evil, but the story and the charactersthere are many, and she's made some choices that are going to stun her die-hard romance fansnavigate timely issues of tolerance and bigotry; fear of the Other; violence on behalf of perceived "purity" and misdirected religious zeal; and how good people combat evil.A fast-paced, mesmerizing, and thought-provoking novel that will no doubt add to Roberts' legions of fans. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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