So... after the conclusion of Book 3 selling me on this series, I'm back to sort of being tepid about it.
I can't really put my finger on what the difference is between this and Ranger's Apprentice, which is one of my Top 10 series.
I decided to read some lower-starred reviews to see what they were saying, and I think these are some of the things I came across that I agree with:
1) The characters just aren't quite as endearing.
2) The plots are slower/not as exciting, and there's a lot more technical detail that sort of bogs the story down.
3) The writing seems younger.
Particular to this - and the next book - with the characters is that they introduced Gilan, a character from RA, into these stories, and then seemed to really underutilize his character. I get that he's making a "guest appearance", so to speak, and that the heroes still have to be the Brotherband, but I sort of wondered, honestly, why they bothered adding Gilan at all in this story, since he didn't seem to add that much to the narrative...
Anyway -
To the younger writing, there is something that bugged me in this series that I don't recall in the first and that's that there's no subtext. Every emotional nuance is explained. I almost feel like Flanagan is writing this series as a "how-to book on how to become a mature young man", with such lines as "he started to get upset at what X said, but then he realized he had a point".
No one - at least of the heroes - seems to ever have a negative emotional reaction that isn't easily talked out or something.
Also, I get that this is an MG series and all, but I find it funny that in a pseudo-medievalish level world, where 19-20 year old young men are running their own ships and getting into life and death battles, they're still too young to drink and stay away from ale. (I find this double weird since the legal drinking age in Australia seems to be 18, so our heroes are even old enough to drink in modern times.)
***
Anyway -
As to this story itself, Tursgurd (sp?) is set up to be a villain, and then sort of mostly set aside and easily dealt with, and the slave dealer guy is the real major villain.
Like all the stories in this series, it's a slower build leading to a climactic battle, but I'm find the build ups slower and slower, bogged down by the aforementioned technical detail of sailing and whatnot, and the pay offs kinda meh.
This was doubly meh after being really impressed with the finale of the last book.
One review I read of either this book or the next said that Flanagan should've left the series a trilogy, because the third book ended so well and these next two sort of are a let down after that and feel like filler. Sadly, I can't help but agree...