1) This is obviously a major turning point in the series. Do you think that the ‘reveal’ of the Animorphs to Marco’s dad was handled appropriately?
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Man, I think this whole book just didn't get the number of pages it
deserved. Suspicions of ghostwriters aside, the plot was a very important one and got handled well enough, but I dunno why it felt like it was lacking a bit of detail.
2) Do you think that Marco’s dad’s reaction was a pretty accurate representation of what would actually happen? How would YOUR dad react if you told him you had spent the last three years fighting brain-stealing slugs?
I think it was a genuine father reacting to seeing his baby child turning into an anthropod or a crustacean (out of all the morphs, Marco HAD to pick the less pretty ones.
My father would have been abrupt, while at the same time curious, I think. He wouldn't have been AS disturbed as Marco's dad was. But I think my dad would have clicked on to the situation after that moment, possibly as fast as Peter did.
3) What do you think would have happened if the Yeerks attempted to capture Marco and his dad rather than kill them? How would the Chee had reacted? What would have been the long-term affects?
I don't think the Yeerks would have been interested in two human rebels at this stage, they'd rather terminate the problem. Plus, the Visser probably would have gotten off on telling the 'currently enprisioned' Visser, that her host had just 'lost' her relatives in a 'trajic accident', for added torture.
Also, a couple of re-reads back I stated that I would have liked to have seen the Chee get more involved, by throwing a hologram masking the Anis morphing or something, and, I now realize, that we kinda get it here.
4) This is the book where Visser One is finally destroyed and Eva, Marco’s mom, goes free. Do you think that this mission was handled well?
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It was a VERY edge-of-your-chair-tight moment, on my first read.
There was one bit I remember getting confused, because we were given the estimation that the pool was around 100 ft in diameter, but I always imagined it bigger since
The Weakness(where he
ran across the sludge!). In my mind, the piers were always at the edge of the pools. It's just a technicality, but I got a bit lost imagining Marco/gorilla and Rachel/grizzly leaping from the end of one pier to another.
Call me pedantic, but this could be attributed to a ghostwriter, as I got the same experience at a final scene in
The Ultimate later on. I wonder if it was same ghostwriter.
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5) What do you think about the reunion between Marco’s parents?
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Again, I wasn't satisfied with the amount that
was written. Things were so different on both Marco's father and mother, since Eva's 'abduction', it wasn't as simple as a running-down-the-hill-and-meeting-each-other-in-arms moment for me... NOT IN A BOOK THAT HAS ALWAYS BEEN ABOUT WAR, as the author herself always states.
It just left me with much to be desired.
...I was sort of disappointed that the reveal wasn't more...integrated into the plot. I mean, making Marco's dad susceptible to infestation because of his work was definitely possible, and it does kind of branch off of that warning that Eva gave him years ago, like, "don't work for the military" or whatever, but idk it just felt so out-of-left-field. I just kind of wish it had been built up to rather than just "yep about that time," you know?...
Yep, this is what I am trying to say, too,
anijen21.
6) Marco notes that it is possible that Nora was never actually in love with his dad, but was actually a Yeerk plant all along. Do you think this is a viable suggestion, or is he just grasping at straws? Do you think Nora was a Controller all along?
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Impossible to tell. Hard as it was to engage with the Nora-character, credit where credit is due: it is plausible that Nora was genuine.
This is
years after Peter lost Eva. He was showing signs of moving on in previous books. No reason why he couldn't have met a partner. And whether that partner was genuine or not at the moment that they met, it's anybody's guess...
HAVING SAID THAT, I just thought of something... Nora was Marco's teacher, right?! That means she was one of the staff at his school, which happens to have a very important Controller as its assistant principal...
6) I don't think Nora was a controller all along. In an earlier book Marco's dad even talks about how they were fighting and at one point all of a sudden they were happy and never fought anymore.
I recall this, too, actually.
7) The book ended on kind of an odd note. After the Animorphs finally contact the Andalites there is a page break followed by the following words, in bold: "We do know who they are... and we know you, too... What do you think the meaning of this was?
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This
was a bit bizarre, wasn't it?!
We are reading along and suddenly there's this statement from the enemy directed at us!
Why would the writer include that?!?! And then not in the following books?!?!?! Just for 'St.Because's' sake?!
8 )Anything else?
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Overall the book was a good read, but not amongst my favorites, though it clearly had the potential to be so.
Good moments was the way in which they entered the pool this time, the bug-fighter roller-coaster ride and how Jake was seemingly in control and all, but they had overlooked that tiny detail, and then they panicked!!
...and then they spend like ten pages gaining enough velocity to enter the ocean which is literally the stupidest filler in the ENTIRE SERIES (wouldn't crashing into the ocean at a high velocity be MORE DAMAGING than entering at a low velocity? Did this ghostwriter never fall down before?)...
...and then even Eva's rescue just feels...anticlimact ic, somehow. Visser One was such a well-developed character, I would have at least liked to hear her take on her death.
EXACTLY! We are no wiser as to HOW Visser One got to be in the circumstances of Visser Three's captive a second time. We can only assume there was failure in the Anati system,
?
And just for the record, anyone notice the NO OBJECTIONS from Cassie on the parboiling of Yeerks, this time around?!