I needed to sit with this for a while before doing this review.
The story itself is a little outlandish—especially when you compare it to the other three books. I was a little thrown off by not only the massive jump in time but the fast-forwarding through some fairly extreme world-building. On the one hand, I can understand why Jeremy Scott chose not to walk us through the hows and the whys of the world ending up the way it did since (at least in America) we basically tiptoed into this worst case scenario for four years. Which, sadly, makes this sort of thing go from bonkers-ass-crazy to plausible.
On the other hand, it does make the story feel a little empty in places. Like joining a show a two or three episodes in—not enough to be completely lost but you kinda regret not starting it from the beginning. It also felt too short and a little rushed while still having moments that felt like filler that, honestly, didn’t really impact the plot other than delaying the characters’ progression.
Now, as far as the characters and the writing and the overall tone: all just as perfect as the others in the series. Natural progression and growth even with that long gap in the timeline. The humor was spot on as always and the respect paid to mental / emotional health was wonderful.
My biggest issue with this story is Boss Hogg and his Chairface plan with the moon. Now, I read comic books so I’ve seen some wacky supervillain stuff but this was a little too cartoony even for me.
Honestly, while I love these characters and was happy to spend as little time as them as this book allotted, I don’t think this story was needed. I think it would have been okay to leave it at the third book. But I’m also not mad that this does exist.
For the record, I’m only giving this four stars because of Pluto.