The first two stories were pretty short reads (especially the first one), while the second was a pretty epic story about saving a population from a dying world. I think I felt about this collection about how I felt about most of the other Young Wizards books: there are certain aspects that I get tired of and groan at, but mostly I really like the ideas and characters. I am more in love with the concepts than I am with the people, but the people are pretty fun too sometimes. Now that there are more than ten separate books about them, I have trouble keeping track of everything that's happened (which isn't the author's fault, of course), but I guess that stands to reason since I have read them over the course of a couple decades. (I remember getting the first three from the library as a kid, and rereading them as a mid-twenties bookstore employee!)
The Halloween story was kinda silly to me. You have Nita bonding with her pumpkin that she carved for the holiday and then having it sort of warn her that zombies were randomly attacking, after which she assisted the pumpkin in countering the attack. References to pop culture abounded as usual, which is one of the things I tend to just kinda tolerate in these books.
The Christmas story was a little more fun, and involved the return of a group of characters we got to know in a previous book. It's weird, I did kinda miss Roshaun, even though I actively disliked him in the book where he was introduced. (I know, you're sorta supposed to, he was obnoxious.) I have weird mixed feelings about Kit's sister Carmela, honestly; she's hilarious and it's funny to watch her holding her own amongst wizards when she is not one, but sometimes her wildness feels too much like "hawhawhaw, that wacky Carmela's at it again!" and it gets to be too much for me. I thought Filif, the Demisiv wizard (from a treelike race), was kind of weird--I guess I always think that about him, and his weird bordering-on-kinky desire to get covered with Christmas tree decorations felt weird to watch. I did like the storytelling about his species' initial choices to become who they are now, though I found all the references to modern media kind of tiring. I guess if you have a bunch of wizard friends from other planets, holing up in the basement to watch Christmas movies seems like . . . something one could do . . . but I don't know, I wasn't very into it. I did actually like though that this was about a bunch of wizards just chillin' and there really wasn't a huge overarching crisis to deal with, beyond the easily disposed threat of bullies from the neighborhood coming to vandalize what they thought was an unsupervised Christmas tree.
Last of the bunch was my favorite story, which was about Nita and Kit going to Tevaral, a doomed world that needed wizardly help to evacuate. They were basically drafted to go help manage the worldgates that were being used to transport the indigenous species off the planet to their new homes, because their moon had anomalies that was going to cause it to break up and kill everyone on the planet. And one of the issues was that a good chunk of the population didn't want to leave, and no one knew why. They were claiming they would be dying with their world instead of escaping, and even other Tevaralti people didn't understand why they were making that decision.
I kinda didn't like this, because the story was set up like there was going to be some underlying reason they wouldn't abandon their world, and that Kit was going to be instrumental in discovering this and convincing them to evacuate. But it turned out to be kind of simplistic in description and in the presentation within the story. There was a lot of stuff about "being of one mind" in the story, since the Tevaralti race was sort of low-level empathic and that extended to both each other and their weird octopus-like pets, but it just sort of confused me why they couldn't just talk about it, even to each other, and why even other Tevaralti mostly didn't understand why these groups were holding out.
The other thing I didn't like at all was that Kit spent a bunch of time talking about Star Wars with aliens because one of them looked like a Wookiee, and he made them watch the trilogy and talked about it a lot and discussed opinions regarding the later-released movies and . . . I dunno, I get tired of the pop culture, which was more explicit this time, with more specific references to characters getting name-dropped, and it sort of felt like it was leaning on an expectation of reader recognition of the movies. (I have seen those movies once each and really am not a fan, and remember very little about them. I do like Yoda.) The story had the protagonists getting assigned to worldgate duty with other humanoid aliens and Kit was put with these two characters named Djam and Cheleb. They put a lot of focus on Cheleb being a third gender (instead of using he or she, Cheleb used "hae"), and I was on board with that because I love when there's nonbinary representation of some kind in a book even if it's an alien, so I was kinda disappointed that there were MULTIPLE instances of the character getting called "he" and "him" by the narration. (Not the characters slipping up. The narration. A lot. More than two dozen times. Most of the time it got it right, using "hae," "haem," and "haes," but if the author keeps accidentally calling the character "him," you know the character is still being mentally gendered male in the author's mind, and no editors caught it.) Also there were several uncomfortable scenes where Kit talks about porn with another guy (including enough info that you knew exactly what kind of porn) or narrates the finer details of getting an unwanted erection. Happy to see more escalation of a realistic teenage relationship morphing from an intense childhood friendship into a romance, but I wanna see more subtlety. Details on wrangling a boner? No thanks, argh.
The other thing I wasn't a huge fan of was soooooo many cameos--that's a common issue I have with the series, because it's gotten so broad over the years and a lot has happened, so a character popping up and saying their catch phrases and making references to the stuff they did together before disappearing to somewhere else on the planet was just not really my bag and I get tired of it.
What I really DID like was how intense the idea was--that the wizarding community in this universe has systems in place to create whole new ecosystems on new planets using the standards of the old ones and can transport entire populations there if their worlds start dying. It made me sad to think they were actually transporting them to multiple worlds and this previously unified species would theoretically become more separated and culturally divergent depending on what planet they picked to raft to. They didn't go into this much, what it must be like for the individuals of that species to make this catastrophic journey--an outsider's perspective was offered several times through Kit feeling bad for them, but there wasn't much information about them specifically and what their cultures were like. There was more emphasis on the concept, with a lot of cool science associated with it. Not so much the personal aspects, which I usually like more. There was enough to hint at it and I could imagine it, but I had to if I wanted to get it.
Still, there was enough emotion to sink your nails into--enough that I cried a few times while reading the long story. :)