


Travelling from far and wide, they spend glorious days feasting, hunting, reminiscing and sharing. The opening scenes take us to the Scottish Highlands where the McLeod family gather for their annual Christmas celebrations. Lewis thrown in along with a healthy dose of romance.īasically, Year One by Nora Roberts, starts off as a dramatic apocalyptic story. You see, it started very much like Stephen King’s The Stand, a terrific post-apocalyptic/eschatological novel and one of my favourites in the genre (along with Cormac McCarthy’s The Road and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale) before it suddenly morphs into an urban fantasy ala Karen Marie Moning’s Fever books, with a little bit of Harry Potter, Tolkien and C.S. Depending on what you think of the genre that dominates the novel from thereon in, responses to the book overall will vary. The principal reason for this is because from the blurb and the first hundred or so pages, the novel sets up the reader and one set of genre expectations that are, out of the blue, overturned. This is such a difficult and, frankly, strange book to review.
