The Operator (The Peri Reed Chronicles)
The Operator (The Peri Reed Chronicles) book cover

The Operator (The Peri Reed Chronicles)

Mass Market Paperback – November 22, 2016

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Pocket Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1501149917
Dimensions
4.13 x 1 x 6.75 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

About the Author Kim Harrison, author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Hollows series, was born in Detroit and, after gaining her bachelor’s degree in the sciences, she moved to South Carolina, where she remained until recently returning to Michigan because she missed the snow. When not at her desk, Kim is most likely to be found landscaping her new/old Victorian home, in the garden, or out on the links. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Operator CHAPTER ONE “Ah, ma’am? Please don’t touch the car,” the man with the glass tablet said, and Peri flicked her eyes to him, acknowledging his words as she lifted the handle of the hundred- thousand-dollar car. Immediately it opened, the door making a soft hush of sound that meant money well spent as she slipped inside and let the leather seats enfold her. “Ma’am?” It smelled new, and her eyes closed for a moment as she almost reverently set her hands on the wheel, smiling as her shoulders eased and an odd relaxed tension filled her. It was sleek, sexy without being over-the-top as if confident in its power and comfortable under the spotlight. Its red color went deep, showing shadowed layers that only an off-the-assembly-line paint could deliver. A two-seater, it looked fast, with wide tires that had ample turning radius in the wheel wells and an antenna array panel to plug in just about anything now or in the future. The sound system was adequate at best, but the onboard computer display was big enough to be useful and glass compatible. Much of it was plastic, though, and Peri’s nose wrinkled. “It looks as if it was made for you,” the man said, the annoyed slant to his brow belying his smile as he stood just outside and held his tablet like a fig leaf. Peri tossed her straight black hair out of her eyes, her smile real as she looked up at him. “I bet you say that to everyone.” He rocked closer. “No. Only those who look like they belong in it.” He cleared his tablet, and the car’s logo ghosted into existence on the clear glass. “Well?” Angling her slim form, she smoothly got out before he had a coronary. Immediately the chaos of Detroit’s auto show beat anew upon her, the air smelling of ozone and popcorn, and the rhythmic thump of ambient electronic dance music from the live stage pounding into her. Content, she sent her gaze up to the multitude of cameras set to record and identify, secure in the knowledge that the swirls of black smut she’d painted on her face would keep her anonymous. She wasn’t alone wearing it—face paint had become to Detroit’s auto show what big hats and mint juleps were to Churchill Downs. Both men and women sported well-placed dots and swirls to disguise themselves as they checked out the competition or just avoided being tagged and sent literature. As she was dressed in black leather pants and a cropped jacket with a silk shell and six-inch black boots, the paint made her feel especially flirty and powerful. Sexy. She turned back to the coup, thinking it was cheating to show it in a paint job that you couldn’t get from the factory. “How do you get around the weight issue of the batteries? You’ve got them in the front, but the drive tram is in the back. The weight isn’t over the wheels, and it’s going to turn as if it was on pudding.” His interest sharpened. “It’s not an issue at posted speeds.” Peri nodded, and he winced as she ran a hand caressingly over the car’s sleek lines—all the way from the front to the back. “Over posted speeds is when you need the control, though. Acceleration?” “Zero to sixty in four-point-two seconds,” he said, tapping his tablet awake. “Battery only, or warming engine assist?” she asked, and he smiled as he brought up the literature. Ten steps away, a printer came alive with the stats. “Engine assist. You can’t break four seconds on just battery.” “A Mantis can.” The man looked up. “I mean a real car.” Peri eyed him from under a lowered brow. “You’re saying a Mantis isn’t a real car?” “I mean,” he tried again, flustered, “a car you can actually have. If you’re looking for speed, have you considered—” “Sorry. No thanks.” Peri stepped out from under the hot spotlights and into the milling crowd, snagging a tiny flute of champagne in passing. Her dress and attitude parted the way, and her warm feeling of satisfaction grew as the tingle of alcohol slipped into her. It was nice to know she still had the best. Ahh, life is good. “Why do you tease them like that?” a voice said at her elbow, and she spun, hand fisted. But the man had dropped back as if expecting it, mirth crinkling the corners of his brown eyes. The brief protest of the surrounding people subsided as they pushed past and around them—and were forgotten. “Silas?” she questioned, her gaze flicking to the messenger drones at the ceiling, worried a high-Q might be hiding among them. Then her eyes dropped to his tall, body-building form. His cashmere coat across his wide shoulders made him even more bulky, but his waist was trim and his face clean-shaven. The white of salt from the street rimed his John Lobb shoes, and he grimaced when she noticed. “What are you doing here? How did you find me?” she said, shifting into the lee his body made when someone jostled her. Taking her empty flute and setting it aside, he pointed to a nearby communal area set up with tall tables and rentable connections to get a message outside the no-Internet-zone needed for security. “I’ve never known you to miss the opening of the Detroit auto show,” he said as they walked. His low voice at her ear slipped through her like smoke, staining the folds of her mind and bringing a thousand unremembered moments with him to hover just beyond recollection. “I like your hair that length.” It was quieter among the tables, and Peri touched the tips of her jet-black hair just brushing her shoulders. She’d let it grow. No need to cut it. Slowly she levered herself up on one of the high stools. He’d been watching her. That was probably where her itchy feeling had been coming from, not that she’d had to close her store on a Monday to hit opening day. The hot-spot connection found her phone and chimed for her attention, and she turned the rentable link facedown. Silas looked tired. There was a familiar pinch of worry in his eyes as he levered himself onto the seat across from her. He laced his thick hands together, setting them innocently on the table, but she could smell the hint of gunpowder on him; he’d been to the range recently. A black haze shadowed his jawline, and a memory surfaced of how it would feel if she ran her hand over it, delighting in the prickly sensation on her fingertips. Behind him, people in extravagant dress and having enough technology to run a small country mingled and played. She’d come to lose herself among them, to pretend that it was hers again for the day. She missed the feeling of being in control so surely that the rest of the world seemed a fantasy. I shouldn’t have come here. I made a mistake. A misplaced anger seeped into her, pushing out the doubt. She’d made a place for herself, a new life, found a new security that didn’t hinge on anyone but herself. “Are you alone? Is Allen with you? Damn it, you do realize you might have blown my cover?” “It’s nice to see you, too. Yes, I’m fine,” Silas said dryly, and she slumped, looking past him and into the crowd for anyone watching without watching. Sighing, Silas scratched the side of his bent nose, his focus blurring as if remembering a past argument. “I might not have been the best agent, but I know better than to go to your coffee shop. As for Allen, I don’t particularly care where he is. I’ve not been in contact with him since”—he hesitated, lip twitching—“you quit.” She had left, and he’d found her. So not good. “Stay away from my coffee shop.” Heart pounding, she slid off the stool. “Peri. Wait,” he said, voice weary. “I only came to give you your book back,” he said, reaching past his coat to put one of her journals on the table. Her breath caught, and she stopped, recognizing the leather-bound tome. It had been painstakingly pieced back together, the damage pressed out as best as possible, but it was still obvious where the bullet had torn into it. Kind of like her life. It was from her last year in Opti training, an entire twelve months of memories intentionally erased from her mind so she could successfully bring down the corrupt Opti from the inside. The United States’ clandestine special ops program was gone, and the diary was her only link to why she had done it. Her pulse quickened at the answers that might lie in the pages. Why she hated blue sheets, why silver Mustangs made the scar on her pinky itch, why the scent of chocolate chip cookies left her melancholy. There were answers in the pages, guarded by demons she feared would tear apart what little self she’d managed to pull back. Her ignorance made her vulnerable, but it also made her safe. Hand to her cold face, she backed up, her footing unsure on the thick carpet. “I’m not that person anymore,” she whispered. Damn it, she was going to have to rabbit. If Silas had found her, anyone could. “Peri.” He pulled her to a stop. Anyone else would have gotten her heel through his instep, but she hesitated, letting him draw her back. Breath held, she looked up at him, her soul crying out for what she’d left behind. She’d liked who she’d been, and the wrongness of that still woke her in the night when all was quiet. Silas had been a big part of that, not the worst, but a part nevertheless. “I’m not asking you to return to the person you were, just understand her,” he said. “It’s been almost a year. You have to stop hiding from this. You won’t ever be free of it if you don’t come to grips with what you’ve done, the good and bad.” “Is that your professional opinion, Doctor?” she said, yanking out of his grip. Her wrist stung, but she refused to look at it. Silas’s jaw clenched as unknown thoughts flitted behind his eyes. Her chin lifted, daring him, and with a frustrated grimace, he turned away. “Never mind. I made a mistake. I shouldn’t have come. You take care of yourself, Peri.” “You, too,” she said as he walked away, hunched and unseeing. His tall frame and wide shoulders were tight under his coat as he wove through the lights, bare skin, and beautiful people. With a feeling of having won, she watched the crowd take him, but it shifted to worry as her fingers traced over the book in indecision, until finally she picked it up. A business card from the Georgia Aquarium slipped out, falling to the floor. It wasn’t Silas’s name on it, but he’d likely be using an alias. Next to it was a hand-printed phone number. She stared at the card for a moment before turning and walking away, leaving it to be lost in the clutter. To know what she had done might destroy everything she had made for herself. It was easier to ignore it, keep pretending she was happy and hope the lure to return to the power and prestige would never be stronger than the loathing of what she’d turned herself into to get there. But she wasn’t sure she could do that anymore.

Features & Highlights

  • On-the-run ex-agent Peri Reed returns bigger and bolder than ever in this second highly-anticipated installment in #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Kim Harrison's new suspense trilogy, The Peri Reed Chronicles.
  • Peri Reed’s job eats her mind, but for a special task agent in hiding, forgetting the past can be a blessing. Betrayed by the man she thought she loved and the agency who turned her into the very thing she fought against, Peri abandoned the wealth and privilege of Opti for anonymity riddled with memory gaps and self-doubt. But when a highly addictive drug promises to end her dependency on those who’d use her as a tool for their own success, she must choose to remain broken and vulnerable, or return to the above-the-law power and prestige she once left: strong but without will—for whoever holds her next fix, will hold her loyalty. Yet even now as then, a love based on lies of omission might still save her life.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(165)
★★★★
25%
(138)
★★★
15%
(83)
★★
7%
(39)
23%
(125)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Awesome & Amazing! Must Read!

I loved and enjoyed reading the suspenseful, intriguing, and outstanding second sequel in the amazing Peri Reed Chronicles. I received a copy by the exceptionally talented Kim Harrison.
After leaving Opti, Peri opens up a coffee shop and wants to remain anonymous but her old boss wants her back and injects her with a drug that helps her remember when she drafts but is highly addicting. Peri runs to Silas for help in finding an antidote and through reading her diary and spending time with Silas, Peri starts to remember the love her and Silas had.
Read the highly recommended, wonderfully written with captivating characters, engaging and riveting story line, and a rekindling romance between Peri and Silas.
7 people found this helpful
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COMPLEX PLOTS, DYSTOPIAN FUTURE & TIME TRAVEL: KIM HARRISON'S NEW SCI FI THRILLER IS A WINNER

THE OPERATOR, by Kim Harrison, is now available online and in bookstores.

It’s been a long wait since the first book in the series. I have missed Kim Harrison. After reading so many bad books, picking up this one was like a breath of fresh air. Good prose, realistic, natural dialogue. A complex plot without a million dangling loose ends. A professional, dedicated author at the top of her game. A really good book.

While you read this, pretend you are in the bookstore of your dreams or maybe your childhood. In one of those old leather chairs, tucked in the corner. With a little table and a standing light by which to read. I’m going to hand you the book. It’s new and the binding crackles when you open it.

Kim Harrison, whose series “The Hollows” produced a long run of best-sellers, has a new series. The first book in the Peri Reed Chronicles was released in 2015. That was “The Drafter.” It introduced a dystopian near-future world without magic, but with technology indistinguishable from magic. A science fiction thriller that feels real and now. Science it may be, but there are people who are born with a genetic ability to use it. Such people are called drafters.

Drafters can manipulate time. Not like traveling through a wormhole or time machine. More like making a precision adjustment of as much as 45 seconds, or as little as a blink. Just enough time to undo a fatal bullet or catastrophic error.

Peri Reed is a drafter. She used to work for the ultra super secret (and thoroughly corrupt) government agency known as OPTI. Now, she’s free and alive — and trying to stay that way. Peri has lost many memories. Years worth of memories. Some memories have been replaced by false ones. Some are just gone, leaving holes in the continuity and fabric of her life. She wants her memory back, but not if the cost to get them is going back to work for OPTI — or any other agency. How to win freedom and control of her life? Regain her memories without selling herself to whoever makes the best deal?

Peri Reed isn’t just any drafter. Peri is the drafter. The best ever. Which is why everyone wants her — and she wants none of them. Yet, she needs help. There’s no way she can reconstruct her past without assistance from at least a couple of the people hunting her. Dare she trust anyone?

Everyone is making her an offer. Everyone is lying.

The Operator is not merely good. It’s a great read set in a dystopian future world. Fast-paced. Elegantly written with an underlying ironic wit and refreshingly natural dialogue. The plot and characters are layered. Complex. Everyone has a secret agenda. Behind that are more secrets and even darker agendas.

In The Drafter, Peri and the gang had promise.

In The Operator, they fulfill that promise. Peri is brave and brilliant, dangerous and vulnerable. Passionate, with scary, lethal fighting skills. She’s had bad relationships. Lost everything that mattered to her. Made terrible life choices. Lives in a brutal world of danger and duplicity through which she must navigate alone, or depend on treacherous people with dubious motives.

If you love science fiction thrillers and are tired of reading the same tired stories, this will be a treat. This is a fresh story with an intriguing, original plot, full of Kim Harrison’s wonderful writing to sweep you into another world. Every clue Ms. Harrison drops is a real clue. The characters are mad and complicated, embodying his or her own mystery. Not only is “The Operator” worth reading, it’s worth reading twice.

I can hardly wait for the next book. It’s not over for Peri Reed. Not by a longshot.
2 people found this helpful
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Lots of action, flat characters, average narrative, probably need to read the first in the series to appreciate. Minor spoilers

I really vacillated between giving this two stars or three. My rating is 3 for Kim Harrison's talent and 2 for this specific book that lasted a bit to long for me because I couldn't get invested in the characters (which were flat).

This is my first Kim Harrison book. I realize it is part of a series but I wasn't overly concerned because most author's give you, the key points to jump into the story. This book had some clues but it took me around a 100 pages to understand most of the premise and another 50 or so to understand the entire picture. Harrison writes thriller fairly well and that is why I stuck with this story until page 245. As another reviewer mentions, this book goes around it circles. The main character, Peri runs away, she gets caught by the bad guys, she runs away, she gets caught the good guys(?) but they are so good, so she runs away - you get where this is going.

She is under mind control thus doesn't know for sure what is real and what isn't. I know a lot about this subject, more than most people would ever know, so I was intrigued and Harrison got a lot of things right. The unfortunate part is there is a lot of extraneous stuff happening, which is supposed to add to the tension and Peri's confusion, some of this was interesting. However, for the most part, this just lengthened the story line without adding to the value of story or said another way, lots of "filler" for my taste. The more the book meandered, the less I could identify with the character. Maybe if Peri were more sympathetic, I would stick it out but at this point, I am feeling like why bother? There are many great books out there, why should I commit to read it until its conclusion?

This book obviously isn't for me, it just meandered to much and instead of experiencing the thrill of the chase. I just got bored. I suspect, I am not in the majority so I won't rain on anyone's parade. I may pick up something else by Harrison but at this point, I probably need a break.

I think a lot of people would enjoy this book, especially those who get lost in hide and seek thriller type books.
1 people found this helpful
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Lots of action, flat characters, average narrative, probably need to read the first in the series to appreciate. Minor spoilers

I really vacillated between giving this two stars or three. My rating is 3 for Kim Harrison's talent and 2 for this specific book that lasted a bit to long for me because I couldn't get invested in the characters (which were flat).

This is my first Kim Harrison book. I realize it is part of a series but I wasn't overly concerned because most author's give you, the key points to jump into the story. This book had some clues but it took me around a 100 pages to understand most of the premise and another 50 or so to understand the entire picture. Harrison writes thriller fairly well and that is why I stuck with this story until page 245. As another reviewer mentions, this book goes around it circles. The main character, Peri runs away, she gets caught by the bad guys, she runs away, she gets caught the good guys(?) but they are so good, so she runs away - you get where this is going.

She is under mind control thus doesn't know for sure what is real and what isn't. I know a lot about this subject, more than most people would ever know, so I was intrigued and Harrison got a lot of things right. The unfortunate part is there is a lot of extraneous stuff happening, which is supposed to add to the tension and Peri's confusion, some of this was interesting. However, for the most part, this just lengthened the story line without adding to the value of story or said another way, lots of "filler" for my taste. The more the book meandered, the less I could identify with the character. Maybe if Peri were more sympathetic, I would stick it out but at this point, I am feeling like why bother? There are many great books out there, why should I commit to read it until its conclusion?

This book obviously isn't for me, it just meandered to much and instead of experiencing the thrill of the chase. I just got bored. I suspect, I am not in the majority so I won't rain on anyone's parade. I may pick up something else by Harrison but at this point, I probably need a break.

I think a lot of people would enjoy this book, especially those who get lost in hide and seek thriller type books.
1 people found this helpful
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Excellent for fans of supernatural thrillers

The Operator is the second book in a series. I didn’t get around to reading the first book yet, but I really enjoyed this one. It didn’t take too long before I got the hang of it, though, figured out all the connections between the characters, and once I did, I really enjoyed this book.

Peri Reed, our main character, is a special task agent in hiding. She also has a special, rather uncanny ability: she’s a drafter, and can rewrite short period of times. This causes memory / sanity issues for her, though, and she has to rely on other people to anchor her to reality. But she was betrayed by the very people she thought she could trust, and now she has major gaps in her memory that she’s trying to fill.

I loved Peri. She’s an excellent main character, with a solid intuition but unfortunately with some very real struggles, and issues on who she can trust. Her old boss wants her back, but she vowed never to work for them again. Then they come with a tempting offer, making Peri’s struggle all the more dire.

This was an excellent, well-written, suspenseful book with a great premise. If you enjoy thrillers with some supernatural element, I recommend this book. I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review.
1 people found this helpful
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so-so

had a hard time relating to the characters' angst. very slow going.
1 people found this helpful
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The Operator

The Operator is the latest book by award winning author Kim Harrison. It is the second book in the Peri Reed Chronicles, the first being The Drafter.

I am assuming that The Operator begins very close in time to where The Drafter ends. I haven't read the first, so I can't speak for certain. However, The Operator opens with Peri in the coffee shop that she owns, trying to piece the last year back together. She is a Drafter, which means she can rewind time for a bit and rewrite it. It means that she loses a period of time in her life though. Which causes some problems because new memories can be placed there, ones that Peri can't dispute because she has no organic memories of that place in time.

Peri is given a copy of the diary she kept during her training at OPTI, and as she begins to piece back together those pieces of her past, that past comes calling again. Her constant companion, Jack, was her Anchor. The person Peri trusted to fill in her memory blanks from Drafting. Jack betrayed her, and is now a hallucination that Peri uses as her intuition. But Jack is back, the real Jack. And he's got some tricks up his sleeve that Peri isn't prepared for.

When her former "boss" at OPTI tries to lure Peri back, she tries to run. Tries to keep her life as her own. But the promises that she's being made seem almost too good to be true. Can he really have a drug that can allow Peri to draft by herself, eliminating her need for an anchor, and thus eliminating the potential for all of her memories to be erased and rewritten?

The Operator takes us on a thrill ride, as Peri both works with and tries to evade the CIA, OPTI, and the local police, all while trying to piece together her real past. She meets old "friends" and new ones, and has to determine who is less likely to get her suckered into working for them, or killed. And on some occasions, being killed is only temporary, so it's the question of permanently killed, instead of "mostly dead".

The Operator was fun, but I think I'd have enjoyed it more if I'd read The Drafter first. Kim Harrison writes books in a series, and while they can be read alone, it's always better to read them in order. There is so much background information, character development, and general information you miss if you don't start with the first book in each series. It was a bit of a slog though, I kept picking it up and putting it back down, because while it was good and enjoyable, it just didn't seem to grab me as tightly as some other books do. I liked it, but it wasn't fantastic, and won't go on my "read again" list. However, I'd still recommend it, if you like semi dystopian books, kick-ass heroines, people dealing with some serious (metaphorical, in this case) demons, etc. It's worth a read, with the caveat of reading The Drafter first.

Series: The Peri Reed Chronicles
Mass Market Paperback: 496 pages
Publisher: Pocket Books (November 22, 2016)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1501149911
ISBN-13: 978-1501149917

In the interest of disclosure, the publisher did provide me with a copy of this book to read.
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I loved it, I am a huge Kim Harrison fan ...

I loved it, I am a huge Kim Harrison fan and have to read everything she writes :)
The Operator, is book two in this series. It picks up from where book one The Drafter leaves off and Peri has been very busy. She is a brave , vulnerable and Kick butt girl. She’s on the run and searching for the truth after losing everything that mattered to her. She lives in a brutal world of danger, lies and corruption she must navigate alone, or depend on the people who have betrayed her to find the truth.
Not so romantic is this one and more about getting answers and surviving, it is fast paced and a leaves you asking some questions at the end. Can't wait to read the next one!
I would highly recommend reading book one in the series first, The Drafter as you need the background and details to be on point for this one.
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Who can Peri trust? Seems like no one at this point :)

The Operator, the second installment in the Peri Reed Chronicles, really showcases the immense talent of Kim Harrison. This series is quite different than her beloved Hollows series, but it's certainly got the bones to be just as good as that series.

Filled with futuristic gadgetry, shadowy government factions, and double agents aplenty, it's really difficult to tell at times who can be trusted. Much like Peri, even I have a hard time accepting many of the characters at face value. Having been betrayed on every level in the previous book, Peri is once again thrust into the world she wanted desperately to leave behind. And of course, the people who betrayed her are at the center of it all. Promising a drug that can stop memory loss during a draft, Peri is lured right back in, much like her enemies knew she would be. Still dealing with huge chunks of lost time from her stint in OPTI, the drug holds quite a lot of appeal for Peri. So does the job, for that matter. Although she's broken away from the shady government agency, the danger and the money and the power still call her name. Add a memory-retaining drug to the mix, and it'll take a miracle to keep Peri away.

It should be no secret by now that I love this series and I love Peri Reed. As I said before, it's so completely different than anything Kim Harrison has written before. Not only that, but the series is sheer brilliance. With a story centering around memory loss and time lapses and hallucinations, it's not an easy series to grasp in the moment. I'm often left feeling just as confused as Peri is, but Harrison deftly pulls all the threads together and slowly knits everything into one cohesive picture. That's not an easy feat, not at all, and especially when weaving in so many past events into the current story.

All in all, The Operator was a fantastic second installment in the Peri Reed Chronicles. Highly recommended and I can't wait to see what she brings to the table with the third installment of this series.

*eARC received via NetGalley in exchange for my honest opinion.
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HE OPERATOR—Like THE DRAFTER— was filled with a lot of action...

THE OPERATOR—Like THE DRAFTER— was filled with a lot of action and suspense, but I had a hard time staying in the story and connecting with Peri in book two.

I really enjoyed THE DRAFTER, in fact, I gave it 5 stars. So when I got THE OPERATOR, I thought that it would be another fast paced, enjoyable read by Kim Harrison. For the most part it was, but I found myself getting bored and really disliking Peri at points throughout the book. I knew from book one that she was impulsive, but it seemed worse in THE OPERATOR and her impulsiveness lead her to some bad situations which was annoying. She was constantly in danger and there was plenty of chances to get the upper hand but she just didn't. It was one cluster after another. It just got to be too much by the end.

Let's talk about the relationships of the book. On one hand we have Silas. I really like Silas, and he really likes Peri. Peri unfortunately doesn't remember him like he remembers her but there was some development on this front and I really enjoyed that part of the story. Then we have Jack. We ALL know Jack from book one. I can't stand Jack and Peri says she can't, but for a lot of THE OPERATOR she had no problem standing him. It was very aggravating and I really could have done without his character all together.

I just don't know what to do about this series. It started out fantastically, but THE OPERATOR fell short for me. I will probably give book three a chance because i really love Kim Harrison's past work and that counts for something.

* This book was provided free of charge from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
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