What do you think?
Rate this book


4 pages, Audiobook
First published September 1, 1997

But this is the first book where the "science" didn't really work for me. Androids? Come on, now. I can accept mouthless aliens who drink through their feet, but somehow a whole society of ancient androids that just so happen to live in the same city as our heroes, even attending the same school, is a bit hard to swallow.
I would have accepted even that, but it's hard to when it feels, ultimately, irrelavant. Nothing was changed or gained (unless the Chee eventually become important to the plot later on, I suppose). Marco's dad is in no more danger now than he was at the start of the series. Even the pretty McGuffin they faced hell and high water to acquire was lost to sea. What was the point of all that peril? Even Marco made it clear that, despite the trauma he's suffered (he was mangled pretty badly in this book), he'll forget it over time. So... What's the point?
This all just felt like filler.
“How do you . . . how do you live with the memory?" he asked me.
I knew what he meant. See, win or lose, right or wrong, the memory of violence sits inside your head. It sits there, like some lump you can't quite swallow. It sits there, a black hole that darkens hope, and eats away at everyday happiness like a cancer. It's the shadow you take into your own heart and try to live with.
“I shrugged. "I guess I try not to think about it. I try and forget. And after a while, the nightmares don't happen as much."
Erek put a finger to his head. "Android," he said. He made a bitter, ruined smile. "I can't forget. See? I can never forget . . . anything."
I looked at him. Already in my own human mind, the memories of that night's horror were fading. The flash of blades and the pain and the sickening feeling of my fist closing around the Hork-Bajir's throat . . . they were being covered over by scar tissue.
What if I could never forget?
What if all those memories were fresh forever?