Hot damn! Love this series, love the narrator for this series. Please, people at 47North, give this writer a nice fat contract. I want more. I want to increase your revenue by buying more books about Zoe.
Do not make me gnash my teeth and shake my fist at you.
By binge reading all three in a row, I appreciated the subtle but meaningful change in Zoe's perception of the people around her, of the Makers, and the evolution of the dragons both as concept and characters.
Flat characters? Not to me. The audiobook director and narrator helped me appreciate that Vee, Danny, and Toshi have all been changing off stage. I have no problem believing that several novellas could be filled with the story of their own chaotic road to I-Day.
Similarly, in terms of plot development across the books, I like that Claudia and Gerry haven't changed, really: they came off as goody two-shoes when we first met them in Seven Kinds of Hell, yet their brand of idealism meant that they were loyal to Zoe in A Pack of Strays. This time, they tether points of transition in the narrative when Zoe needs to reconnect from Japan, or needs an efficient mid-battle update on what's what.
The novel is go, go, go without a lot of time in Japan or Alaska, the first two artifact runs this time around, yet both locations are home to role models for Zoe, maybe something to absorb when she catches a break and can devote some time to the mind lab, and her feelings. That's got to happen: action-packed is all to the good with an imminent turning point in the overall narrative, and I hope it doesn't turn out to be the grand finale of a fireworks display with us all heading home. The next book could be... different.
Thank you, Dana Cameron, for not going schmaltzando on the emotion. It is intense, and calibrated to the personality of the first-person narrator. Love that and love her accent, Kate Rudd. I hope you'll be narrating more action-packed Fangborn novels soon.