Review by Booklist Review
Rollins' latest mix of science and history is one of his most exciting and most terrifying books to date. Sigma Force has been attacked, and Commander Gray Pierce and his cohort, Monk, arrive at Pierce's home to find Monk's wife, Kat, comatose on the kitchen floor. Pierce's fiancée and Monk's two kids are nowhere to be found. The team also has its hands full trying to track down the culprits responsible for the murder of several scientists who appeared to have made a breakthrough in the world of artificial intelligence. Add a real-life medieval text known as the Malleus Maleficarum, or Hammer of Witches, which was responsible for countless deaths of people accused of practicing witchcraft, and the result is a fantastic read for those who love high-concept adventure. All of the propulsive narrative elements that Rollins' fans expect are on full display in this guaranteed crowd-pleaser, which offers a deep dive into the scary realm of a future in which technology threatens to run amok. Rollins has truly secured his claim as heir to the best of Michael Crichton.--Jeff Ayers Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
At the start of bestseller Rollins's imaginative 14th Sigma Force novel (after 2017's The Demon Crown), Sigma Force commander Gray Pierce and his best friend, Monk Kokkalis, return to Monk's house in Silver Spring, Md., after a night out to find the place a wreck. Monk's wife, Kat, is lying unconscious on the kitchen floor, and Monk's two daughters, six-year-old Penny and five-year-old Harriet, and Gray's pregnant wife, Seichan, have been abducted. The operatives learn that the home invasion occurred shortly after a massacre in Portugal that claimed the lives of five women who led an international network of female scientists, which funded groundbreaking AI research conducted by 21-year-old genius Mara Silviera. Mara, who believes that accessing her work was the killers' goal, is on the run for her life, a plot line that overlaps with the search for Penny, Harriet, and Seichan. Rollins does a good job keeping the action moving, but the future scientific developments he presents fall short of the standards set by Michael Crichton. Author tour. Agents: Russ Galen, Scovil Galen Ghosh Literary Agency; and Danny Baror, Baror International. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
No one expects the Spanish Inquisition. Especially when there's AI involved in the brouhaha.Blame it on Umberto Eco: For every one, soaring Name of the Rose, there are a dozen books of Da Vinci Code depths, with medieval voodoo tangled up with modern steely-jawed heroes, priests and demons, international espionage, and all the rest. Rollins (The Bone Labyrinth, 2015, etc.) has a corner on part of this market with his Sigma Force franchise, in which steely-jawed Cmdr. Gray Pierce and his sidekicks stalk the world searching for and neutralizing evildoers. Apparently the bad guys who steal his pregnant S.O. (significant other and/or special operative, as you will) didn't get the memo that Gray is not to be trifled with, but then they're no slouches: They're bent onwell, world conquest, maybe, but certainly on getting rid of their enemies, a bunch of witchy women with Ph.D.'s and feminist ideas who hang out inor under, that is"the only existing example of a medieval prison in all of Portugal." Not to be outdone in the subterranean department, the bad guys, who wear priestly collars and veils and all but are still whiz-kid hackers, have a clubhouse underneath Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris ("Of course, the Crucible would pick such a spot"), while Gray and his cohort tootle around on the D.C. Metro and suchlike venues assembling the wherewithal to go kick clerical butt, real-time and virtual. Chopsocky, MRI scans, tumbling helicopters, incunabula, grimoires, USB-C cablesRollins pulls out all the stops in a tale that hints at not just Eco, but also Stieg Larsson in making one of its principals a brilliant young woman programmer who is probably better suited to the Castile of El Cid than Capitol Hill but still knows how to use smart machines the right way. Or does she? It depends on which side of the Witch Hammer one falls.Another mindless entertainment to fill time better spent with Monty Pythonor Indiana Jones. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.