Reviews
“Devastatingly powerful. The Only Harmless Great Thing is a searing meditation on myth, history, and the persistence of poison in all its terrible forms. Bolander gives voice to the voiceless with such controlled and perfect fury the pages seem to char and burn as you read. It feels like an alternate Just So Story revealed to us by an ecstatic punk oracle. I can’t stop thinking about it. Nor will you.” —Helen Macdonald, author of H is for Hawk
“Bolander shares literary DNA with Le Guin, and shows it in this tragic and triumphant novella.” —John Scalzi, New York Times bestselling author of Old Man’s War
“Bolander’s skilled prose always leaves me agog, but days after finishing The Only Harmless Great Thing, I’m still swimming around in its depths with a sense of wonder. It’s beautiful and sad and relatable and unremittingly, crucially defiant.” —Kevin Hearne, New York Times bestselling author of the Iron Druid Chronicles
“A brutal story beautifully told. [Bolander’s] prose sings like music…. Read this.” —Chuck Wendig, author of Star Wars: Aftermath
“Characteristically poetic prose . . . poignant.” —The Guardian
“This handcrafted arrow of a novella becomes more absorbing with each read.” —Kirkus
“The most beautiful and heart-breaking piece of work Bolander’s written to date.” —Amal El-Mohtar, Lightspeed Magazine
“Elephants have infrasound and memory and majesty; we have Brooke Bolander.” —Lawrence M. Schoen, author of Barsk: The Elephant’s Graveyard
“A fierce and visionary Jumbo Agonistes aimed straight at the present day—mango-pulping, temple-smashing, exploding out of history with the all the grand power and folly of story.” —Max Gladstone, author of The Craft Sequence
“The Only Harmless Great Thing is Southern Gothic come to the big Northern City, where it settles in and begins to glow, dangerously, and to sing, mightily, and to break out and trample reality into a new shape. This book is transformative. I can hear echoing long after I’ve set it down.” —Fran Wilde, author of Updraft, Cloudbound, and Horizon.
“Fork-suckingly, plate-lickingly good.” —Nat Cassidy, author of Steal the Stars
“As succinct as it is beautiful: a snippet of times and of characters who struggle with unthinkable injustice.” —The Book Smugglers