Pilgrim is overall a solid follow-up to Sinner, but there are some very glaring falls here that stop it quite short of being as good. In fact, this feels a lot more like a book from the Axis trilogy--which isn't really a good thing--but it feels more like Enchanter than either of the other two, which is an okay thing. This series is strange.
Pilgrim begins immediately where the preceding novel left off. Faraday is very much human again, Drago has been reborn after being killed by travelling through the Star Gate, and enchantment is dead. The Star Dance has been essentially obliterated with the destruction of the Star Gate, and now the TimeKeepers--Demons who have been entrapped in the stars for millenia--are on Tencendor and intend to revive their master, Qeteb, whose body parts are scattered in the Lakes of Tencendor.
The strengths here are, thankfully, quite a few. Both Drago and Faraday here feel like actual characters, and they are almost singlehandedly carrying my genuine enjoyment of this second trilogy. Drago struggles with his true destiny, suffers from doubts and insecurities, and yet he is still kind and attempting real redemption. Faraday, on another token, is pretty much done with all of the Prophetic flim-flam and just wants to quit being bandied about by destiny or whatever evil-of-the-day is threatening the world; frankly, that mindset just rocks and Faraday rules.
However, this is where we arrive at the myriad problems. Smallest of Douglass's sins here is the latter quarter of the novel. The pacing just suddenly grinds to a halt after over 400 pages of progression and buildup, so we can (very tediously) follow the evacuation of Tencendor. We could have cut out maybe thirty to fifty pages here and I don't feel that we would have lost much.
The far greater follies come with the story's treatment of RiverStar, and (arguably) of WolfStar. RiverStar is revealed to have been brutally, viciously murdered by Caelum--who, may I remind everyone, vehemently blamed and framed his brother Drago for--and nobody seems to care. It's breezed over as if it isn't a massive reveal, and not a single character really seems to feel like Caelum was even in the wrong here. He even gets a happy little ending with her, because apparently brother-on-sister incest is only okay in the afterlife, and again: she doesn't even seem to care that he stabbed her to death. Why the hell was this not a bigger deal? The only message sent here is that we shouldn't care about a woman--or, hell, anyone--being murdered, so long as they were promiscuous and snobby and were being kind of a dick at the moment. Why was there no real absolution or consequences for this??? Especially because, as far as a ton of characters likely still know, Drago murdered his sister. Nobody's gonna try and clear his name?
WolfStar, on the flipside, is brutally raped multiple times over and over and this, too, is presented as a very matter-of-fact thing. We are shown various examples of people clearly treating rape as the vile act that it is (ie Zenith, StarDrifter, and very predominantly Faraday) so it doesn't seem like rape is exactly acceptable in this world. And yet, the book simply glosses over time and time again that this previously extremely important and powerful character is just being raped by the new villains. How are we supposed to feel about this? The predominant emotion is disgust, but as far as the story tells it we have a bunch of villains seeming to think it's funny and the heroes having zero reaction to any of it. It's simply baffling.
Those two very impassioned paragraphs are the reason I dropped this book a whole star. The fact of the matter is, aside from these glaring issues I had with the novel, I still genuinely enjoyed it and thought it was a fine middle chapter for the concluding trilogy of Tencendor's world. I will be moving on to the third and final book.