Yes, I say again; brillant book
1) It worked. Can praise the strategy, but can't knock the results
2) Think it was sick. Seem reason they couldn't ask the chee to live out lives for them. You only get one live, to with it what you can. What David was planning was disgusting
3)Cuz he's an idiot. And because they were probably the greatest threat to him. Ani's would hunt him, so long as he was quiet, I can see the Yeerks ceasing to care, or passing him off for dead
4) Not sure. Maybe just a clash of will or something. I'm not a Rachel was a nutter sayer, but David embodied much of what she may have become. He didn't *** up stuff cuz he had too, he did it cuz he could. And there were times Rachel would push that limit. People often clash with things similar to themselves
5) At the time, and for them, I'd say yes. They have enough to deal with, if they found this easier to carry than killing him, yes. But now, that I'm older, and a share colder, I say they should have killed him. It would be harsh, and terrible to bare, but for logicistics it would have been for the best. Plus, it would mean at least that the final solution to David was shared, not left on one....
One of my favorite lines of the series in this book.
When Jake is discussing his worry for Rachel and she replies that the Visser would "trade his Blade Ship for your head on a stick" I think it was.
It touches me. I feel for the kid, but at the same time, there's so much pride in believing that one person makes a different, that he can save the world. One of my favorite images of Jake and all of them, right there