Really enjoyed the setup of this world. We follow the FMC as she gradually realizes that the world as she's known it her entire life isn't as it seems. There were a few times when I wondered if this was going to turn out to be a why choose or even polyamorous romance (let me tell you, I am DOWN), but it didn't seem that way by the end. There are a lot of characters, a lot of moving parts, but things are revealed in a way that lets it all grow on your mind as the story builds. The action and the pacing was great, and I could hardly put it down. I especially want to see what happens with the generals. Their dynamic was so good, and I wish we had gotten more them all together in this book.
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With all that said, the things listed below did bug, and they are the reasons it's not a 5 star read for me, and also why I'm still considering whether or not I want to continue the series. If these things are ignored, this is a great book. Just don't think about them too much.
‼️ SPOILERS from here on out
1. My biggest issue is that FMC is a legend in this world, but doesn't live up to it.
At the top of her game she commanded 6 thousand, and was legendary for bringing all of her soldiers home. Her scouts were the best because of her training, and every one of her 6 thousand were completely loyal to her. She had battles that people who didn't know her whispered about, and many people who had never met her knew her on sight.
This is my kind of character!
So tell me WHY she sucked so bad in every fight scene in the book? She was stumbling around, falling, constantly being saved by Every. One. Else, struggling to hold her own against so many they came across.
Part of this is later explained when old friends who also are similarly skilled see her and exclaim how weak she's become while in hiding because she hasn't been eating. They were able to get a hit in on her while fighting, which has apparently never happened or something because it shocked them enough that the fight ended.
BUT in the scenes where she's fighting, she's describing what everyone around her is doing while she does so little. In one particular scene, she just kept telling people to run while they were being picked off left and right, and the only one she defended in all those pages was the MMC. And she just pulled a few of the attackers off him before running again, or before she was taken down and he had to save her instead. Multiple times. Where were her skills then? Where was her vigorous and abusive years of training? We see how everyone else is faring from her POV, but it's like she just watches most of the time and lends a hand there and there.
2. The amount of times her mission changed.
Things happened rapidly, and she went from heading out to do one thing, to going to do another before finishing the first, and so on, a few times over. The little side missions did add to the story, but it was the uncompleted ones that stuck out. By the end of the book, her original mission that she was so adamant she had to do because she couldn't not answer her brother's call for help, still hadn't been completed, but the next book is set up for a completely different mission.
3. The hero complex of the MMC.
It's annoying. I get it, he's an alien on a mission to make sure the galactic rules the humans weren't included in creating are being followed, and he believes in saving lives even though his people were just fine with cutting the power and basic resources of a planet with 8 billion people off in one day, and watching them flounder around in a world they're no longer equipped to live in until the majority die off and are forced to create warring factions to survive. But he can get angry with the FMC for killing humans who literally were about to kill them. Or for trying to end the life of a child infected with a virus that as far as they knew only ends in the infected killing anyone around them. But because the MMC was trying to keep secrets, they didn't know what he knew, which is that the rage apparently passes after a couple weeks. But he can self righteously be livid with with them even though he didn't give them that information.
Oh and would-be gang-bang rapists should just be knocked out instead of killed when saving their target. (Insert eye roll.)
He was so naive but so determined he put them in more dangerous situations in his need to be the hero any time someone needed help.
This IS being addressed, since there were little signs that he's starting to be less rigid. Or that he's finally starting to listen to the FMC when she tells him not to trust someone at their word. It may be one of his few weaknesses, but man, was it frustrating to read.
4. Lastly, the kid brother.
His chapters and actions and thoughts varied so wildly, but it's really clear that even after everything the FMC went through and sacrificed to protect him, and even after she gave up everything for him, he's just not understanding enough. From what we're led to understand, he talked her into leaving everyone behind and going into hiding. And then he left her, saying horribly hurtful things to her, because he "needed space." He knows important truths about her that she doesn't even know, and was supposed to stay with her, but he joined a group that his father didn't like, and that even he's not completely sold on, to go off and do whatever to get his space. He shows moments of caring for her and we see in his thoughts that he just said the hurtful things to make her let him leave, but ultimately it's not enough compared to what she sacrificed for him.