In the aftermath of antibiotics failing against new, aggressive strains of bacterial infections, New York becomes ground zero to the world's single largest and deadliest act of bioterrorism. Detective Jacob Gibson lost his wife in the 8/17 attack, and is now called away from caring for his sick daughter to investigate a new possible act of terrorism - this time against the indigent immigrants living in a makeshift shantytown cum concentration camp situated in Central Park. It's a scene of gross, indiscriminate slaughter with one startling peculiarity in this new age of medical catastrophe: all of the victims were remarkably healthy. And one of them, a 12-year-old boy named Mateo, is missing, on the run, and hunted by the mercenaries that perpetrated this mass murder.
Chris Holm's Child Zero is roundly situated in scientific plausibility and grounded in America's harsher realities of racism and xenophobia. Holm paints a rich, and frightening, view of the near-future wherein our last line of defense against sickness, infections, and plague have completely collapsed. A simple scratch can lead to amputation, or even death, and despite mankind's other technological advances, like electric cars and high-speed internet, medicine has been taken back to the Dark Ages. To top it all off, a group of endtimes cultists are hellbent on finishing off humanity, once and for all.
It's a heady mix of regressive forecasting for humanity's days ahead, and all the scarier for its plausibility. Couple all that with the nature of the guarded, fenced-in, concrete-barriered Park City housing much of New York's immigrant population and travelers who found themselves stuck in the Big Apple in the aftermath of 8/17 years earlier, and things get darker all that much faster. Although it's set just a few years ahead, Child Zero holds a potent familiarity thanks to our post-Trump, COVID-19 present, not to mention the book's fictional Department of Biological Security and the draconian, authoritarian laws that have been swept into place in the wake of bioterrorism, which makes the Patriot Act look downright quaint.
Holm's world-building is top-notch, and richly compelling. It all blends together with some smart characters, a nice dose of conspiracy and paranoia, and plenty of action to seamlessly create a frenetic thriller. On the paranoia front - we're not just talking about Jacob not knowing who he can trust or who to turn to. The paranoia is so much more pervasive and existential here! If somebody is caught on the streets past curfew, or, worse, maskless, what do you do and what can happen? If somebody is unmasked and coughs in your general direction, in a world where medicine has been all but curtailed, it takes on much more significance and concern, even beyond what we've grown accustomed to during these last couple years of the pandemic. The fact that Child Zero is dealing with much broader systemic failures, presenting a world once again rife with literal plague, well, reading this at a time when quarantines and lockdown are still very much a part of our reality, the tension here is real, and Holm makes his characters, and by extension his readers, squirm.
Child Zero is an achingly effective thriller, and one that some readers may not be entirely ready for given the last two years. Despite our having a reliable vaccine to fight against COVID-19 infections, we are still in the midst of an on-going pandemic, which can make certain sections of Child Zero a little uncomfortable to read and bring issues of loss and fear very close to home. It also paints an uncompromising picture of what the next pandemic could look like, based on our current abuses of antibiotics in agriculture, unnecessary prescriptions, and lack of novel antibiotics and vaccines. It's scary stuff, made all the scarier for its plausibility.