To me, this book encapsulated desperate times, and it was Cassie giving voice to the Animorphs cry-for-help in the most desperate of manuevers.
1. Cassie makes a number of observations about the break down of the Animorphs as they adjust to their lives as refuges. Primarily, she focuses on Jake and how the loss of his family has clearly broken his ability to lead. Given what we know about Jake, and what we have seen of him throughout the series, do you think this is a reasonable response? What about the breakdown amongst the rest of the Animorphs?
Jake was still sour, and somewhat mourning, over the loss of his family. The war might as well have been over for him here. So I think his portrayal was legit.
The rest of the Anis I wasn't so sure.
Tobias and Ax could technically still remain in their usual 'homes'. But both were pretty much non-contributors to this situation.
Marco's was the one I thought was most unrealistic. Yes, he was over the moon about his parents' reuniting, but, the 3 of them have been living with the Hork-Bajirs for a significant time by now. And yet, Marco didn't seem to do much in terms of helping the other's adapt. So I wish he could have done something more to help the 'strategic retreat' situation than just play with a stick by the bench.
Rachel's was pretty realistic. She accepted the situation, and she may well have seen it coming, hence was more psychologically prepared. So she could focus more on helping her family come to terms with the new situation. A tough task, given her Naomi's constant resisting.
And it was only Cassie, really, whom was trying to do something about it.
2. We see the most that we ever will of life within the refugee camp in this book, primarily the reactions of the parents that were rescued in the previous book. With the exception of Marco's parents, none of them seem to be taking it too well. Rachel's mom keeps trying to escape and Cassie's parents are overly concerned with the ethics involved. No one seems to be accepting that it is a war. Do you think that this response makes sense, even in light of having seen real live aliens (not to mention your kid turn into a bug)?
I think the fact that they were forced to relocate and virtually share a habitat together (with bark-eating aliens!), brought all this into focus. And it was important and realistic to have this book dedicated to this here.
I think the parents' reactions were realistic and in character, after all, they had not yet experienced the war scenarios first hand. All they had as proof were their kids turning to animals and a bunch of real aliens, but none of the brutalities of battles, or highly advanced Yeerk technology or Yeerks plopping out of their ears.
And, more to the point, they weren't the teenagers that the Anis (or even the handicapped kids) were! They couldn't as easily simply suspend disbelief. I thought this portrayal of them was very well done.
It's why wish Marco's parents (more specifically Eva) had gotten more involved to help them through this. Eva knew the stakes of this war better than none, and she had the age, that the Anis' didn't have, which was the only conventional thing that would voice reason to the likes of Naomi.
3.Is this an appropriate time to introduce auxilary Animorphs, or should they have done so sooner/later?
Seems all the Anis had were allies with tied hands or limited in some way.
The Chee were literally stuck within their programming,
The Ellimist was all powerful but contrived by the 'rules of the game', the
Yeerk Peace Movement were seemingly inactive, and virtually forgotten, until the end of this story... And, conversely, though I could see a cool character like
Mertil being used in this story, the Andalite wasn't morph capable. And his
shorm Gafinillan was most likely in his death bed at this stage.
So it's hard to say WHEN would have been a good time to insert these guys.
I think because this is the FINAL MAJOR ARC, it's ideal and worthy of them to enter the series. The Animorphs were completely desperate and it
was past the time for them to increase their forces. Later would have been too late.
I am glad KA finally did this here.
4. What do you think about their methodology of using handicapped children? Is it humane? Are they taking advantage of them or giving them a proper chance to fight?
Man, the idea
was troubling to me, at first, but you know what, the situation wasn't much different to the Anis when they began. The fact that they are handicapped in some way, doesn't exclude them from the human community. And Earth IS NOT the
Andalite homeworld, where these people are exiled and virtually excluded from such matters.
They were THE safest option at the time... Though if Cassie was going to go ahead with her 'gambling' at the end there, they might as well have picked people they knew, or characters that weren't being used like
Melissa Chapman...
5. Did any particular auxilary leave a lasting impression on you? What do you think about James' team of 17 as a whole?
I really liked James' leadership. There was so much of Jake in him, it's not funny.
But there is something that needs to be said about their choices of morphs. Can't recall the ones exactly, but there was a bunch of random zoo collective during their first trial, with him coaching them during Cassie's demand.
Also, anyone notice that everyone's morph (Rachel's grizzly, Marco's gorilla, Cassie's wolf and so on) all got repeated randomly through the non-major auxiliaries, but NO ONE picked Jake's tiger... What was with that?!?!
6. We see in this book that morphing fixes post-birth wounds (which we already knew) in the case of James, but does not seem to fix certain illnesses like cystic fibrosis. Any of the biology/technology geeks care to delve into the workings of the Escafil Device and take a guess as to why?
Would have to give this some deeper thought, but Prince Escafil would have made the invention strictly to making exact biological copies, whilst preserving the subject's mind during the morph. Hence why the post-birth wounds such as amputation and accidental paralysis are feasible. But someone who's born deaf, already contained the DNA circumstances that allowed for that. The morphing technology simply preserves the original state.
7. Cassie's decision. What are your thoughts about her decision to let Tom go with the morphing cube?
I want to state, that I LOVE THE CHARACTER, I really like Cassie, don't care what people say.
And I find it AMAZING how KA ALWAYS opts for it being CASSIE that ALWAYS makes these types of major innovative moves. Cassie has a catalog of these stunts!!! (Ref. to creating a bond with the Karen-Controller, to turning David nothlit, to erasing the presence of Visser Four's host body from the existence, to turn away from an experiment to wipe out free-will, to go after the machines by going after the Taxxons etc... the list goes on!!!!) And I just want to reiterate that this is one of the reasons why I enjoy the character so much.
And so we have HER here giving the idea of the handicapped recruitment AND the handing of the Morphing Cube.
She definitely has a gifted superhuman foresight and it's definitely not highlighted more than here in
The Ultimate.
Having said that, reverting back to the first time I read this book, I had such trouble accepting what she did!!!
It was betrayal IN SO MANY LAYERS! To Jake, to their cause, to Elfangor, to the Andalites. Left right and center.
It is REAAAAALLY hard to come to terms with what she did at the end of this story, it just didn't seem to fit, it was like turning an open cold can of coke upside down in the Sahara. Such a big and ambitious move, just leaves you wondering HOW LONG had she been thinking about this?!?!?
Re-reading it now, it's easy to see that, much like Jake's bad decisions in the previous book, it's nothing more than a plot device, that will ultimately redeem the character and make EVERYONE (including us readers) feel bad for criticizing her decision here. Too bad Tom would inevitably die at the end, but that's besides the point, isn't it?! And Rachel's death COULD BE attributed to this turning point here. At least indirectly.
Now, I HAVE TO SAY, though this was one of the bad cases of Ghostwriting for me (1-lined paragraphs, missed opportunities in the case of the auxiliaries' choice and performance of morphs), this scene in particular, was nicely executed. A c-o-m-p-l-e-t-e-l-y unexpected turn of events delivered fast and to the point in the last few pages.
Though I understand how other people weren't satisfied by the very final scene either...
OH! COULD SOMEONE maybe post the alternative ending that KA had that went around... I think I read it here.
Anything else?
I just want to say that, I couldn't really picture the final battle scene with all the auxiliaries vs the Visser and his troops very cohesively. They were on a ramp, in a garage/hangar of a FACILITY FOR THE BLIND?!?!?!?! Then they were climbing hills and through the woods.
But I do recall being at the edge of my seat the moment Jake/tiger let out that whimper as the Visser was about to crack his windpipe with his thorny tentacles...
This
was one major battle. But because of Cassie, no one really felt like it was a win.