I don't really care about all that. I don't care if more realistic endings don't always end on a solid note. I just feel that when a person has control over how something ends, then it should be a more or less cinderella ending.
I never thought of it as a war story. Maybe if some animorphs started dying off earlier in the series, then I'd be ok. It sets that precedent.
I've read her note to the fanbase. If she wanted to end her series that way, then she should have written the other books differently. That way everyone would have expected a more traumatic ending. I also wouldn't mind her putting the Kelbrid and One in there, if I thought she'd start something else.
But she won't. She moved on to something else and decided to let the fans try to figure out what is going on with the mess she left us.
She built up Rachel as a two sided person, but in the end treated her like a one demensional character. She also made it out like Tobias lost everything when he lost Rachel, when he obviously didn't.
It makes me question the level of respect she really has for fans, even though she says she gave us that ending because she respects us.
I agree.
Some of the books were serious, but there were significantly more light-hearted and humorous moments. I don't think it was written like a war series at all - if it were, not as many kids would have read it. The violent themes certainly weren't graphic. I don't know if anyone else picked up on this, but I noticed that the subject of the Animorphs killing their enemies isn't mentioned very often until the final story arc - it just says that they fought them.
It was inconsistent and I know this is a bit harsh, but I think it was a colossal dick move to end the story that way. Sad stories are supposed to be sad, not just piss people off. I finished the Animorphs series feeling pissed off.
Who else was disappointed by the lack of a big Ax/Visser Three showdown? He talked about having to avenge his brother's death in like every single one of his narratives but it's like KA forgot about it when she wrote the finale. The worse part was that I was expecting it. I actually had never read #53 so I was satisfied with the plotline with Tom, but I really would have preferred if he had lived. That was just personal preference - I do think Jake being depressed over Tom's death is much more realistic than every single one of them except Marco being a huge Debbie Downer.
And what was up with Cassie's new boyfriend? That really stuck it to every J/C fan out there.
I would've ended it with Rachel surviving and finding a way to handle her problem, Ax killing Visser One/Three and killing Alloran out of mercy, and Jake feeling guilty about flushing the Pool Ship. I also would've worked in Ellimist and Crayak somehow to tie it into #41 better - possibly ending the story with Crayak conceding defeat over that portion of the game and them planning the next portion of their game.
What bothered me the most about this ending was that it was my favorite book series by an author I thought was really talented, even though she was a bit disorganized. I would've been able to forget a crappy ending by any other author.