But then, we didn't get a chance to hear of any of the other Horks decisions, because the author never really wrote about it - maybe they talked to Toby beforehand and said that they would prefer to fight for their homes over running, and she was their mouthpiece.
That's not a bad point there. I can pretty easily picture Jara or Ket deciding to take a stand and fight rather than running (perhaps not completely understanding that they'd need to run away in the end, anyway), and I'm sure other Hork-bajir in the colony may have felt the same way. So, yeah, maybe we can chalk that up to something that happened off-screen.
I wouldn't say that she features prominently in any of those books. She played a role in a sub-plot in 23, only really reporting to the Animorphs at the beginning and making a couple of other minor appearances later. In 34, she's just... there, and contributes little. In 47, half of the book is filler about the civil war, so even if her role is prominent, it's half a book. I don't think she ever had a real prominent role, and that's a real shame.
That's not really fair, though, because the fault lies in
how those books were written. I will give #23 a pass, because it had enough of a complex series of plots that anything about the Hork-bajir was going to get squeezed out, at least to some degree (yet, of the three, #23 is probably one of the
better character-development books for Toby). In #34 and #47 though? Toby
should have had a huge role in #34 (hell, she should have been the one possessed by Aldrea, the whole "Aldrea picked somebody similar to her" thing was bullcrap considering that Cassie and Aldrea
could not have been more different), and the only reason Toby didn't get fleshed out more was because she was keeping to herself that whole book. Again, like I said, it was simply how the book was written, keeping Toby quiet, when it could easily have developed her character to a far greater degree. Same with #47, just, ugh, the Civil War chapters did not need to be there
at all.
Oh, hey! On the subject of books we don't like! #34!
I actually rather liked the
general concept for #34, but I think the problem lies in where the book falls in the narration order. Cassie, being the narrator, was contractually bound to be the one who ended up getting possessed. And, since gender-bending was probably out of the question, it had to be Aldrea who possessed her. *sigh* Which is where we have the problem. Seriously, Dak would have been a MUCH better fit for Cassie. Two people who wanted desperately to keep to a non-violent lifestyle, while being forced into a war. Heckuva lot better than trying to shoehorn pacifist Cassie into being anything like the ruthless Aldrea.
Ideally, though, I'd have loved to see Dak and Jake be the co-stars in this book. Both of them shoved into a position of leadership in a war they'd never asked for, and both of them just doing the best they could. I would have
loved to see them compare their own lives to one another.
*sigh* I guess I don't like #34 for much the same reason I don't like #47. Missed opportunities.