I wanted to like this book so bad, because I really liked the premise (countries/a country mad at the US attacks us with bombs made of green mist, green mist kills all the dudes, women are in charge, how does that go?!)
Then, it turns out some men live. Apparently some men were hiking (above the mist) or were in walk-in freezers (so many dudes in freezers! Good for them) or were just evil, like Al (not a spoiler; he was in the first book).
This part bothered me, because we as women or gender non-conforming people *know* men are dangerous to them (yeah, #notallmen, I know!) It's now again about women trying to survive men trying to kill them - this is not new! This is every day for women around the world. We need more mist.
Also, I don't need to be reminded people are evil because they kill baby animals. Jeez. All the animal killing was excessive; have you thought about harassing the prisoners in Madras? That's also evil and doesn't kill baby animals.
Anyway, the book could have been stronger if just Eva got to be "the bad guy." We don't need Al to be scared of bad people - women can be bad people! The majority of the book is just what would happen if some men died but others survived. No mist needed.
In the end, I don't know what this book is trying to be. Countries are mad at the US, specifically the dudes running it, they bomb us and most guys die. I don't even care that the mist wasn't explained, but I *do not believe* that the mist was somehow engineered to give women superpowers that also... have other things in it that I won't mention because they're spoilers.
Is this a book a critique of patriarchal capitalism? If so, I'm down! Is this a book on feminism and paganism and creating a new world? If so, I'm also down! But it is a mashed critique of patriarchal capitalism that then turns into feminist paganism? If so... I'm confused.
Also, it still bothers me from the first book that Imani lost her husband and toddlers, and Karen (who we were supposed to hate in book 1 but like now?) lost her husband and grown sons, but they're supposed to get over it quickly? Yet Mercury meets a dude in the mist, knows him for 3 days, and then gets to sleep off her sadness for three days while everyone else does all the work?
And one last gripe, the wildly bad decisions of Stella and Mercury in acquiescing to Gemma's demands (that lead to Very Bad Things). Stella's given the ability to sense things, but when she says 'this is dangerous' they're all like, 'haha whatever let's try it.' Why?!
2 stars because I like the premise, and the book actually has a satisfactory (for these characters) ending. No book 3 needed!