Mini blurb: Though still on the run, cryptozoologist Antimony Price and her friends seem to have found respite from the Covenant, except now the crossroads are pinning her down to the bargain she was forced to make with them...and who said the Covenant was out of the picture? Caught between a rock and a hard place, not to mention powerless, Annie will need to hang onto all her friends and even a couple of unexpected allies - but mostly her stubborn streak - if she wants a chance to destroy the crossroads once and for all.
***
Picking up where the previous book ended, TAW tremendously ups the ante...but at the same time it plunges us into the domestic life of an adorable found family (1 human + 3 cryptids of different species), which even gains one more (human) member. Some domestic life of course, between a recent enemy relentlessly pursuing Annie and an ancient cosmic horror trying to break her for good, but still - you work with what you've got 😉. Keeping the reiterations to a minimum for once and the previous book's recap less conspicuous, McGuire gives us the best of two worlds: character development and action, friendship/romance and horror, smarts and magic (or lack thereof, but when has it ever stopped the youngest Price sibling? see also: smarts, but add a good dose of stubbornness to it), and even...time travel?!? sort of?!? Of course, I'm partly biased towards this story because it features two of my favourite ghosts and it crosses into one of my favourite series' territory (Ghost Roads, also by McGuire)...and when I say "crosses", I'm being literal (what with the crossroads being the big baddie). But TAW would stand on its own regardless, and it's both epic and strangely cozy, and all-around creative.
(The book also contains an excellent novella that brings us up-to-date with Annie's brother Alex and the Columbus' Gorgon community, not to mention the siblings' adopted cousin Sarah, preparing us for her brief tenure as main character in the next two installments...).
Note: As a rule, I review every book that I rate 3.5 stars and above in full, unless it's a novella or an anthology. But this series has been around for years now, and it doesn't sound like McGuire's going to stop writing it anytime soon, so I decided to only write mini reviews for its installments, or it would be too hard for me to catch up. I'll write mini reviews for the new ones as well, out of consistency.