Apparently my problem with The Darkest Minds was just Ruby and Liam, because I really like this short story with Gabe and Zu. As I said (in a review I didn't expect to be as controversial as it's turned out), this is a series that excels at gritty dystopian - or it would be, if it didn't spend so much time making Ruby out to be this weak, self-loathing victim in a black and white adults versus kids world; it was all just a bit too much for me the way the book blatantly tried to play every. single. emotion. card. ever. (Nor did the meandering plot help.) Anyway though, In Time is different; it's a great companion that adds exactly the perspective I thought was missing from the first book - that of the reluctant bounty hunter who's supposed to be on the trail of these kids (Gabe). Sure, his reasons are a bit trite (the economy tanked; he's in it for the money) and I probably liked his character for mostly the wrong reasons (think of kids like dogs! you're just returning them to the pound!) but you know the whole thing is, in a way, absurd, and I really like his side of things (even if that kind of absurdity and dark humor may not have been intentional) as opposed to Ruby's whole 'woe is me!' thing she's got going (yeah, I know it's a natural reaction to being locked up the way she was, but I just thought the book for fiction was trying too hard in that regard). Plus, this story addresses a whole bunch of flaws from the original setup (not perfectly, but still) - how the color coding came to be, what's going on with the parents on the outside, etc., Zu's pretty great as usual, and heck, even the ending, while in the same style as The Darkest Minds, worked for me because I actually liked these characters (let's just say no good deed goes unpunished). All in all, pretty good for an original short story and I'm definitely glad this isn't another weak rehash as many tie in novellas have been recently. Still have zero interest in Ruby and Liam (sorry), but this was great.