I can't decide if this book is actually better than the last one, or if I'm just becoming immune to terrible books with how many I read last month. Or it could just be that ANYTHING seems good when you're sitting in your calculus class and hating your life.
A lot of my complaints from the first book remain, though. The aliens are, uh, let's say disappointing, his grasp of science seems handwavey at best, and Adam is still in asshole.
So let's focus on the "asshole" comment for a moment, shall we? Well, first we should probably add that all of the humans are assholes: both Adam and his new girl friend Sherri feel absolutely no remorse for the death of the aliens they refer to as "friends." Because they're aliens, see, and not native to the planet Earth, and so they can't have any strong feelings for the things. Or something. I don't even know; I was too busy eyerolling at that section to really pay attention. I suppose, in a way, I could see how Harris can come up with that, especially since the author was a military man whom I presume had seen some actual battles. From what I understand, people who are forced to fight in wars often stop thinking of the "other side" as people, they're just enemies. Which, okay, I'm not going to argue with that--but to declare yourself to be a friend to someone, and then have little to no reaction to their death? That is Not Cool. Adam and Sherri, you are assholes.
Second asshole move: Adam has been in the alien society for all of, what, three months? And as soon as he meets a female human being, he has sex with her. Lots of sex, from what I understand. And Adam doesn't seem to have a single thought about his wife and daughter back on Earth the entire time. How is this even okay? Okay, people cheat on each other all the time. I get that. What I don't get is how a man who wants to talk as if he's devoted to his lovely wife and lovely child will have sex with another woman without feeling the slightest built guilty over it. The only hint to his having any thoughts about his wife and child is that he'll only have sex with Sherri, not anything serious. So it's okay, see, because he has these primal urges or whatever, and heaven forbid he have to go three entire months without acting on them. You can't possibly blame him! He's just a man!
...Yeah, so that bit pissed me off. Anyway.
Riyad. Riyad was...less of a caricature this time? But he did such a complete turnaround as soon as [SPOILER] his pirate army was destroyed. Suddenly, he doesn't care about taking over the galaxy? He feels embarrassed by the idea he had when Adam and Sherri sort of mock it? Yeah, no, not buying it.
I will, however, say that I was quite enjoying Harris' little plot twist. I'm genuinely curious as to what's going on with the Klin and the second-generation humans, and actually want to see what happens in the next book. Of course, this curiosity is utterly ruined by the fact that I despise the main characters. I want to see what happens with the plot twist, but I don't want to be in Adam's head for the adventure. What a dilemma.