What We Harvest

What We Harvest

by Ann Fraistat

Narrated by Lauren Ezzo

Unabridged — 9 hours, 31 minutes

What We Harvest

What We Harvest

by Ann Fraistat

Narrated by Lauren Ezzo

Unabridged — 9 hours, 31 minutes

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Overview

For fans of Wilder Girls comes a nightmarish debut guaranteed to keep you up through the night, about an idyllic small town poisoned by its past, and one girl who must fight the strange disease that's slowly claiming everyone she loves.

Wren owes everything she has to her hometown, Hollow's End, a centuries-old, picture-perfect slice of America. Tourists travel miles to marvel at its miracle crops, including the shimmering, iridescent wheat of Wren's family's farm. At least, they did. Until five months ago.
 
That's when the Quicksilver blight first surfaced, poisoning the farms of Hollow's End one by one. It began by consuming the crops, thick silver sludge bleeding from the earth. Next were the animals. Infected livestock and wild creatures staggered off into the woods by day-only to return at night, their eyes fogged white, leering from the trees.
 
Then the blight came for the neighbors.
 
Wren is among the last locals standing, and the blight has finally come for her, too. Now the only one she can turn to is her ex, Derek, the last person she wants to call. They haven't spoken in months, but Wren and Derek still have one thing in common: Hollow's End means everything to them. Only, there's much they don't know about their hometown and its celebrated miracle crops. And they're about to discover that miracles aren't free.
 
Their ancestors have an awful lot to pay for, and Wren and Derek are the only ones left to settle old debts.

Editorial Reviews

MAY 2022 - AudioFile

From the opening of this audiobook, narrator Lauren Ezzo gives an edgy, anxious tension to each word. Wren details how the blight—a quicksilver-like substance that distorts everything it touches—has leapt from farm to farm near Hollow's End, tainting the soil and invading both its animal and human inhabitants, transforming them into zombie-like creatures operating as a single unit. With her ex-boyfriend Derek's help, Wren finally realizes how to correct the sins of their fathers to save their community. Ezzo's deft performance of this dystopian fantasy is crisp. Changes in volume and pacing as Wren and Derek process their situation and deal with threats make this a compelling listen. S.D.B. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 07/04/2022

Sixteen-year-old, white-cued Wren Warren is the heir to Rainbow Fields, a farm famously known for its healing, multicolored wheat fields and one of the four founding farms of Hollow’s End. But after 150 years of agricultural success, the small town suffers a moldy, silvery blight whose spores decimate crops, and turn humans and animals alike into zombified, night-wandering versions of themselves. As other founding farms fall to the blight, Wren works to keep the mold at bay in Rainbow Fields, especially when her parents suddenly disappear. She recruits ex-boyfriend Derek, white- and Latinx-cued, to help, but in her haste to hold off the blight, Wren is infected. With her body rapidly decaying, she and Derek race against the clock to find her parents. In their search, they uncover dark and twisted secrets about the founding farms’ history and realize that the blight is a living, conscious disease—and that it’s seeking revenge on Hollow’s End. Intense, gripping, and deeply haunting, Fraistat’s debut, an invigorating take on the zombie genre, is a cautionary tale about greed and sacrifice, illustrating that not every legacy may be worth its price. Ages 12–up. Agent: Christa Heschke, McIntosh & Otis. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

★ "Intense, gripping, and deeply haunting." —Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Clever, grotesque, and oozing with atmosphere, What We Harvest is a delightful, page-turning debut. Fraistat masterfully blends horror, fantasy, and science into a tale brimming with slow-creeping dread and explosive, long-buried secrets. I devoured it in one sitting." —Allison Saft, author of Down Comes the Night

"Eerie and beautiful, What We Harvest is a novel that will sink into your roots before it devours you whole. Fraistat's prose is both lyrical and haunting, and she crafts a story that breaks your heart and heals it in equal turns. Horrifying but ultimately hopeful, this novel will be horror readers' next obsession." —Courtney Gould, author of The Dead and the Dark

"A vivid and engrossing horror-tinged tale of magic and corrosive family secrets" —Kirkus Reviews

"Fraistat proves a deft hand at both slow-burn suspense and body horror…an engrossing read." —The Bulletin

“Fraistat’s debut is richly detailed and pulsing with harrowing suspense…Recommend to fans of Rory Power’s Wilder Girls or Claire Legrand’s Sawkill Girls. ­ This atmospheric tale of zombies and rotting legacies is riveting.” —School Library Journal

“Dazzling and dreadful. What We Harvest grabbed me by the throat and wouldn't let go.” —Erin A. Craig, New York Times bestselling author of House of Salt and Sorrows

"Fast-paced and oh-so-creepy, with a festering secret at its center, What We Harvest is the rural zombie novel I never knew I wanted." —Erica Waters, author of Ghost Wood Song and The River Has Teeth

"Wilder Girls' successor is finally here—and it's eerier and more atmospheric than any reader could hope for!" —Laura Graveline, Brazos Bookstore, Houston, TX

“Unputdownable, unforgettable, and gorgeously written. A must-read book.” —Ashley Winstead, author of In My Dreams I Hold a Knife

School Library Journal

03/01/2022

Gr 8 Up—The four founding families of Hollow's End have been raising miracle crops for generations, bringing stability and lucrative tourism to the idyllic and secluded farming town. When the quicksilver blight attacks, it destroys the crops first, coating plants in glistening silver sludge and a rotting stench. Next it comes for the animals and finally for the people, who develop foggy white eyes and run off to the forest, returning at night to mindlessly attack. After Wren is exposed to the blight, she and her ex-boyfriend Derek try to stop the menace and learn the dark truth about their families' legacy. Fraistat's debut is richly detailed and pulsing with harrowing suspense. As Wren and Derek race around town in a truck and on horseback, narrowly escaping the increasingly aggressive blighted horde, Wren grapples with her own transformation. Her perspective as the blight overtakes her is intriguing, adding complexity with the discovery that the blighted are not senseless zombies. Horror tropes are put to good use to create a tense plot that unfolds at a breakneck pace. Lush detail brings the town and the gruesome blight to life, along with a hefty dose of body horror. Fraistat uses the concept of harvest to explore the idea of taking responsibility for one's own actions and the lingering harms of ancestors' wrongs. Wren presents as white, while Derek presents as white and Latinx. Derek's sister and her girlfriend are prominent secondary characters. Recommend to fans of Rory Power's Wilder Girls or Claire Legrand's Sawkill Girls. VERDICT This atmospheric tale of zombies and rotting legacies is riveting, and recommended for general purchase.—Elizabeth Lovsin

MAY 2022 - AudioFile

From the opening of this audiobook, narrator Lauren Ezzo gives an edgy, anxious tension to each word. Wren details how the blight—a quicksilver-like substance that distorts everything it touches—has leapt from farm to farm near Hollow's End, tainting the soil and invading both its animal and human inhabitants, transforming them into zombie-like creatures operating as a single unit. With her ex-boyfriend Derek's help, Wren finally realizes how to correct the sins of their fathers to save their community. Ezzo's deft performance of this dystopian fantasy is crisp. Changes in volume and pacing as Wren and Derek process their situation and deal with threats make this a compelling listen. S.D.B. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2021-12-24
A small group of farms with magical crops are threatened by an all-consuming blight that creates zombielike creatures out of the people and animals it infects.

Sixteen-year-old Wren’s family grows rainbow-hued wheat in Hollow’s End, an insular community that guards its clandestine history mightily. Even as Wren’s beloved dog, Teddy, and people from neighboring farms go missing in the woods, returning as mindless creatures with white eyes that try to attack others, Wren’s dad tries to conceal the alchemy that is the source of their livelihood. However, when Wren’s mom and dad also disappear, she is forced to turn to her ex-boyfriend, Derek, for help. From his neighboring farm, she slowly begins to uncover a truth that also involves his family and two others. The richly developed details of the blight and its relationship to the people of Hollow’s End lend interest and mystery to the familiar romance that also lies at the heart of this story. Likewise, the novel offers an original flavor to traditional zombie tropes, balancing taut, desperate, action-oriented escapes with longer passages describing alchemical rituals. Wren reads as White; Derek is cued as biracial, White and Latinx.

A vivid and engrossing horror-tinged tale of magic and corrosive family secrets. (Paranormal fantasy. 12-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176201376
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 03/15/2022
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1
So, it had finally come to kill us, too.
The sickest part was, I’d started to believe we were invincible—that somehow the miracle of our farm might protect us. I’d seen Rainbow Fields survive crackling lightning, hail, devouring armyworms, eyespot fungus. No matter what came from sky or earth, the field behind our house still swayed with towering, iridescent wheat. Crimson, orange, yellow, all the way to my favorite, twilight-­blazed violet: each section winked with its own sheen.
My whole life, the wheat had soothed me to sleep through my bedroom window with its rustling whispers, sweeter than any lullaby, or at least any my mom knew.
My whole life, until now. When I realized even rainbows could rot.
I stood at the very back of our field. A gust of wind caught my hair, and the cascading waves of wheat flickered into a rainbow, then stilled back into a field of shivering white gold. At my feet, a sickly ooze crept from their roots. It wound up their shafts and dripped from their tips.
The quicksilver blight, we called it, because it gleamed like molten metal. But the stench gave it away for what it really was—a greedy, hungry rot.
So far, I’d only spotted six plants that had fallen victim. No surprise they were at the back of the field, closest to the forest.
The blight in those woods had crept toward us for months, devouring our neighbors’ crops and pets and livestock. Our neighbors themselves. Every night, the grim white eyes rose like restless stars, watching us from behind the silver-­slicked trees.
The air hung around me, damp—cold for late June in Hollow’s End. Spring never came this year, let alone summer. Even now, the forest loomed twisted and bare. From where I stood with our wheat, I could see streaks of blight glinting behind decaying patches of bark.
My breaths came in tiny sips. If I closed my eyes, if I stopped breathing, could I pretend even for a second that none of this was real?
The field was hauntingly quiet. Wheat brushing against wheat. The farmhands had packed up and fled weeks ago— like most of the shop owners, like most everyone in Hollow’s End except the core founding families—before the quarantine sealed us off from the rest of the world. In the distance, our farmhouse stood dark. Even Mom and Dad were out, off helping the Harrises fight the blight on their farm. They had no idea our own wheat was bleeding into the dirt.
Dad had tried to keep me plenty busy while they were away, tasking me with clearing out brambles near the shed. He and Mom didn’t want me anywhere near the back of our field, so close to the infected forest. But today, they weren’t here to check for crop contamination themselves—and they also weren’t here to stop me.
I was our last line of defense. The least I could do was act like it.
Hands gloved for protection, I grabbed the nearest stalk and heaved it up from the festering soil. I could barely stand to hoist it in the air, its suffocating roots gasping for earth. But this plant was already good as dead. Worse. It would kill everything around it, too.
Even me, if I wasn’t wearing gloves.
As I ripped up plant after plant, the stench, syrupy like rotting fruit, crawled down my throat. I hurled the stems into the forest and spat after them.
The wind answered, carrying a distant tickling laugh that squirmed into my ear.
I froze, peering into the mouth of the forest—for anything that might lurch out, to grab me or bite me or worse.
Only silent trees stared back. I must’ve imagined it.
The blighted didn’t wake until nightfall, anyway, and the sun was still high in the sky. Maybe two o’clock. I had time to deal with our infected wheat, before my parents raced back from the Harrises’ in time to meet the town curfew at sundown. Before the blighted came out.
Not a lot of time. But some.
Mildew stirred in my sinuses, like it was actually under the skin of my face. A part of me.
A sour taste curdled behind my teeth.
I spat again and turned to kick the dislodged earth away from our healthy wheat. My foot slipped—on a patch of glistening blight. The puddle splashed into tiny beads, like mercury spilled from a broken old-­fashioned thermometer. Shifting, oily silver dots.
My stomach dropped. No. Oh no, oh no.
It wasn’t just in the plants. It was in the soil. How deep did it already run?
I needed a shovel.
I threw off my contaminated gloves, kicked off my contaminated shoes, and ran. Dirt dampened my socks with every pounding step down the path to our shed. Seven generations of blood, sweat, and toil had dripped from my family into this soil. That was the price we paid to tame this patch of land—our farm. Our home.
That wheat was everything we had.
As long as I could remember, my parents had sniped at each other over our thin savings. With my senior year looming ahead this fall, their fighting had kicked into overdrive—and that was before the blight came, before the farmer’s market had shut down in April.
For the past several months, the blight had been eating its way through the other three founding farms. So now that it was our turn, I knew what it would do. It would take more than this year’s harvest. More than our savings. It would take the soil itself—our entire future.
Mom had never loved Rainbow Fields like Dad and I did. Since the blight appeared and shut everything down, she’d been asking what we were clinging on for. If she knew it had reached our wheat . . .
The blight would fracture my family and tear us apart.
Some heir I was. I kept seeing that look on Dad’s face—the horror in his eyes—when he realized how badly my efforts to help us had backfired, that I was the one who’d unleashed this blight on all of Hollow’s End.
A fresh wave of shame bloomed in my chest. I shoved against the shed’s splintered doors. It felt good to push back. I grabbed spare gloves, the rattiest pair hanging by the door, caked stiff with crumbling mud—the ones I wore when I was a kid. They barely fit anymore.
Armed with a shovel, I raced back to the infected soil at the edge of our farm.
With every gasp, every thrust into the earth, numbing air bit into my lungs. And I realized I hadn’t put my shoes back on. Dammit. Now my socks were touching contaminated soil, and I’d have to leave them behind, too.
The sharp edge of the shovel dug against the arch of my foot as I pressed down with all my weight. I pulled up the dirt and scoured it, praying for smooth, unbroken brown.
But there were only more silver globs—beads of them crawling everywhere.
I could dig for days, and I’d never get it all out. My hands ached, and I dropped the shovel with a dull thud.
It took everything in me not to collapse beside it.
The blight had burrowed too deep. There was only one way I could think of to slow it down. I had to dig up the fence from our backyard and sink it in here, hard into the soil. I had to block off the corrupted back row of our farm, and the forest looming beyond it.
Yes. That was a plan. Something Dad himself might’ve thought of. I could do that. I could—
My sinuses burned. I sneezed into my glove, and the mucus came out like the soil, flecked with silver.
I stared at it, smeared across my fingers. The whole world lurched.
No way.
I swatted it off against my pants so hard I was sure I’d left a bruise on my thigh, and scanned the fields—could anyone have seen what just came out of me?
But there was only me and the swaying wheat. The empty sky.
I couldn’t be infected. I hadn’t touched it.
I had to keep telling myself that. I knew way too well that if any of the blight rooted inside me, there was no coming back. It was worse than a death sentence. It was . . .
I needed to shower.
Now. And then move the fence.
I stripped away my socks and gloves. In cold bare feet, I pounded back to the house, jumping over rocks where they studded the path.
The nearest farm wasn’t for two miles, so I did the teeth-­chattering thing and stripped on the porch. I paused at the clasp of my bra, the elastic of my underwear. No one was watching, but these days the forest had eyes. And it was hard to forget that laugh I thought I’d heard from the trees. My bra and underwear were fine, so I left them on. As for my beloved purple plaid shirt and my soft, work-­worn jeans . . . After my shower, I’d have to wrap them in plastic and dump them in the trash.
Last time Mom took me shopping, I saw how her eyebrows pinched together when she reached for her credit card. There wouldn’t be replacements—that’s for sure.
Pimpled with goose bumps, I charged inside, straight to my bathroom, and cranked the hot water. With any luck, it’d slough off the top layer of my skin. I scrubbed at my arms and legs. I scalded my tongue rinsing out my mouth. When I spat down the drain, the water came out gray. A little dirty.
Or was I imagining it?
Everything was far away, like I was twenty feet back from my own eyes. A gunky heaviness clung under the skin of my cheeks and forehead.
I don’t know how long I stood there, surrounded by cream-­white tile, steaming water beating my body. By the time I blinked myself back into reality, under my head-­to-­toe dusting of freckles, my pale skin had turned lobster pink.
I threw on overalls and combed my fingers through my shoulder-­length hair, before the chestnut-­brown waves tangled into a hopeless mess.
As if it mattered how I looked. My brain bounced all over the place, trying to forget that it was much too late for normal.
I went down to the kitchen and called my parents from the old wall-­mounted phone.

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