The last book of the Wess'har series, you'd think Judge at least would have something more going for it than the same old story of earth reclamation and c'naatat, but no. It's hard to say what I really feel about this series, but in turn I found it bad and then good and then I was rather indifferent. This isn't going to be any sort of proper review, but I write these things mainly for myself, so here we go.
Everything is very circular. From the c'naatat and how immortality isn't really, especially with the can-we-turn-them-normal scenario to earth becoming something a little older and a little newer at the same time. There is progression, but the progression is slow and limps along, and the characters that helped move said progression along aren't necessarily ones that I cared about. You'd think that Shan would at least have a little more agency, but she's pretty much relegated to the background. And I get it, that she's not a special snowflake in the end, but it bugs me and it's not really how I like my books operating. It's very pointed, the ways that she could just mess things up rather than not, and so she's quietly shunted off to the side with no real fanfare.
Which is a problem for me because I read books for the plot, yes, but characters are of equally large importance to me. I like it when they're special; not going to lie. I like it when they actually do things and accomplish their goals, and are important to the plot. This, on the other hand, is the exact opposite of what the book/series wanted to show/tell the readers, and that's part of the reason why it bothered me. I get the point, series, but I just don't like it. Personal preference.
The book still felt rather top heavy, like you could take away chunks of it and leave a book that, well, is essentially the same story, but slimmer. You get to see how people evolve over the years, how people change throughout the books, and it's always interesting to see how one person begins from the beginning of book 1 and then ends up at the end of book 6. If sometimes I don't like how that progression goes, well, that's my problem too.
The end was. Well. Rather quiet, actually. The wrap up with pretty quick and somewhat abrupt, and the events at the end made me want to throw things at the wall. I could see it coming from a mile away, but the actual decision in the end just made me profoundly unhappy. It's, again, one of those things that I understand, but just don't like.
The series isn't bad. It's still preachy in parts, but the way it evolves from showing a very one dimensional view of the universe into one a little more complex is well done. Shan, full of flaws, was a great character that I appreciate if only because she's so different from others.
It's hard rating this. This is a solid book. It probably deserves at least 3 stars. But it's definitely not my sort of book, and it's somewhat amazing that I read through all six in the series in a matter of days. Heck, I should bump up the score just because of that (in fact, I am). So it pretty much comes down to this: my personal enjoyment was 2 stars. It's not a series I will ever reread, unlike a few others. But it's not bad. It probably deserves more like 3 stars, which is what I'll use for the rating.