3.5 stars - Spoilers
Most YA books are all essentially the same old story with the same old boring speshul snowflake heroine plodding along in her snowflakey way and being all insufferable and boring. In a lot of ways Split Second was no different to the usual YA but for some reason all the cliches and tropes came together and worked for me. The story was entertaining and easy to immerse into, the characters (bar one or two) didn't make me want to pull my hair out, and the dual POV and intertwining arc between the main protagonists (Addie and Laila) worked really well.
-I was convinced I wouldn't like Laila after what she did to Addie in the first book but she surprised me with how good a character she was. I actually preferred her to Addie's mousey Mary Sue personality, she had more attitude and layers. I especially loved how she didn't balk at using her powers to her own advantage, it was refreshing to read a heroine who embraced her powers and didn't get all moral about them. She was happy to use them if it meant she could get her way, there was no whiny-emo-ooh-I'm-such-a-bad-person nonsense. Laila did what she had to do and didn't apologise for it, it made for a nice change. Addie on the other hand was more the stereotypical YA heroine, but not as infuriating and irritating as most.
-Connor annoyed me with how he always had to have the upper hand and how he constantly judged Laila as some sort of spoilt brat when he didn't even know her. Just because she was confident and good looking didn't mean she had it easy, he was a judgmental git. He was more tolerable towards the end though, him and Laila started to get along and their relationship was actually fun to read about.
-I didn't like Trevor all that much, he was still a decent enough character but he wasn't quite as impressive this time around. He didn't even seem all that interested in Addie and the mention of all his exes just made him seem like the run of the mill YA manslut hero.
-Addie/Trevor were cute in Pivot Point but in this their romance was really one sided. Trevor obviously didn't remember Addie but she remembered everything that happened between them so yea, she was madly in love with him and he was barely in like with her… Which was realistic but also really unromantic. By the end I wasn't convinced that Trevor would eventually feel for her what she felt for him.
-What I enjoyed most was the strong friendship between Laila and Addie, they supported and respected each other. There was no jealousy, bitchiness, or pettiness between them — their friendship seemed natural and realistic. There should be more prominent female friendships like theirs in YA.
-I was impressed with Stephanie's portrayal, in Pivot Point she was the stereotypical YA shallow, jealous, bitter ex-girlfriend who hated the heroine for no real reason but in this she showed a different side, she was fleshed out, and she was actually a decent character instead of a one dimensional caricature.
-Duke was a slimy wanker but he was also rather entertaining. I thought he'd turn into a full on douche but he managed to sort of redeem himself somewhat at the end.
One thing I didn't get was why Duke manipulated Laila into wanting him in the first book. Did he like her? Did he want to use her for something? If he was in love with Addie why was he all over Laila at the end of Pivot Point? That whole cheating situation was never clarified.
-I wasn't all that impressed with the world building, everything that related to the compound and the various powers was poorly developed. I wanted more on the compound origins, the rules and structure, and the different people in the compound.
-The ending was rushed with the fake grandpa and the agents, it was also a little unclear at times what was going on.
I'm glad this was just a duology, I hate when series needlessly drag on forever. Pretty much everything of importance was tied up, and the characters and story were left in a good place.