Okay, so this book and series overall is a significiant departure from what made the earlier books stick out as more the unknowable, and how this feels like a toehold to keep making you try and feel that way with the new threat of the Kobolas. Now, is that a bad thing? Debatable, and I doubt anyone is up for it given that it is nigh on a children's book and I'm a grown ass man enjoying the hecking Christ outta it!
So, the late Joseph Delaney is doing something surely right!
The introduction of Jenny as a womanly Spook was significant as well. Suppose this entire series has that, eh? And it turned out to be one of my most liked features. At times it became burlesque in how Delaney hyped it up by showcasing the stereotypical "women can't work" angle in some of his characters, most of em' returning ones from the previous series, only for Jenny to outclass and outshine those "bigoted opinions".
But I'm supposing that's less due to how it was handled, as per the attitudes and zeitgeist Mr. Delaney grew up with, and more so how jaded I've become with this crap in 2024. You may think I'm complaining, but sincerely I am not and appreciated the simplistic yet emotional way it was done. If I were ten again or twelve, when I started the original series, this would've served as a major developmental milestone for my young brain.
As it is, I kept thinking it could've been done less stereotypically!
Tom Ward is, as always, an amazingly complicated character. But surprisingly - or maybe it's my age that makes me this cynical - he lost fifty of his Lamia IQ or more here and got goaded and manipulated like no one's business. Not cutting any points for this either, since I was pretty dumb at 17 too, and the suspension of disbelief is handled excellently by Mr. Delaney to not really make it feel...undeserved, by some aspects and an account or two.
Anyway, read it! Great book, great series, by an amazing author. God rest his soul.
5/5