1) Why do you think it took this long to introduce another Visser beyond Esplin and Estrid?
No idea. Surely it was something the authors knew fans had on the back of their mind. I always asked myself 'if we'd already seen a V4, and V1 and V3 have a heavy impact on the series, why haven't we seen the works of a V2!?!?'.
Perhaps a V2 would have diluted the threats the two Vissers were still building up as the series came along. If, say, V2 took the role of V3 during the David saga, we wouldn't have had the strategist side of V3.
2) What do you think about the decision to begin morphing humans without asking permission? Too far, or was it about time? Should they have crossed that line long before this book?
I think never were the stakes so high. In some ways, this makes me realize that it was here that they were finally starting to see morphing more as weapons in the war. The only true advantage they had in the series. The tactics have to match the weight of the missions, not for the sake of being easy, but for the sake of the enemy's defeat.
When they were infiltrating missions, they COULD avoid morphing humans. But when time was a factor in a large ship where the only 'local animals' were humans and the best way to get around and detect another 'human' target was to morphs another human, the only logical answer is to MORPH ANOTHER HUMAN.
And how many morphings did they do in this book?!?! Jeez.
3) What was your impression of Visser Two?
I was looking for something that made him measure up against V1 and V3, but besides being a great tactician, there wasn't much there, was there?! He wasn't ignorant and bloodthirsty like
Esplin (he backed down when a greater threat to his people reared on its head) and he wasn't quite ruthless and canniving like
Edriss (he puts his body on the field of action).
There were strong hints of him being an expert puppet master had him been inserted into the series earlier on and would have made a much heavier impact. But either than that, I didn't get anything more from this Visser. Gotta agree with
JFalcon, it was a bit of a waste.
4) The vast majority of this book consisted of fight scenes that involved Navy personel fighting side by side with the Animorphs. What did you think about this in general?
I was a bit lost at some of these scenes. I couldn't picture the navy mentality compacting with the earth animals fighting off the same enemy. I actually think the navy would have been more like a 'Whattahell-don't-know-what-to-do!!!' kind of reaction and inevitably have fired at one of the Anis.
4) I think it's fine. I think the part where Ax consoles the dying man is touching, with him saying he really tried to fight the Yeerk.
I think this was a very strong scene. Kinda reminded me of the one in #MM3 where he is being bombarded and trapped under bodies on the beach. And may well have been the one that sent Ax over the edge to do what he did.
5) Did Ax make the right choice in technically betraying Jake? Why/why not?
Not sure whether it was THE right choice, because I don't know why, but I could have seen Jake going with Ax's plan, had he had the time to explain it. I am more concerned with the fact that Ax had the time to coherce his teamates into helping him, but no time to get Jake's authorization.
But I see this just as a detail, to be honest. If it was a plot device, Jake could well have been knocked out in the actual fight and the decision could have been made by Ax alone. Would that still be classified as betrayal?
And I could never see Ax actually going through with the plan. Just can't.
6) Anything else?
When he backed down in that last scene, did anyone else feel it fit into the continuity of a Yeerk giving up when the odds are against them (ref.
#6:The Capture)?! We kinda didn't see much of this factor in Yeerks once Jake gave us that insight, did we?! So I thought it was interesting witnessing it on a mighty Yeerk leader.
But more importantly,
WHAT THE HELL did Ax do to this Visser, sworn enemy to the Earth cause, once he landed with the plane?!?!?! It frustrated me heaps how the book just ends without addressing that.