2/5. A meh end to the trilogy. It has some fun parts, but is nowhere near as good as the first two books.
This book played out like a too-typical, under-researched adventure story. I get that that's all I should have expected, but Airborn set a pretty clear precedent that you're supposed to get more than what you bargained for with this series. Skybreaker is a bit shallower than Airborn, and Starclimber just about scrapes the bottom of the barrel. The story is thin and rushed, and the tech behind the Starclimber ship doesn't make sense half the time. Where Airborn, for example, is marked by meticulous thought and detail that's wound into the plot so that you remember it all and can use the knowledge to think through the story, Starclimber is flat-out ridiculous. Broken physics everywhere, a strangely humungous misunderstanding of how basic math works (like, you know, Algebra), blatantly impossible discoveries and space travel that barely contribute anything to the already painfully thin plot.
The space-dwelling creatures may as well have not been in the story at all, and it would have been the same story. Contrast this with Airborn, where the creature Matt and Kate discover IS the plot, and you feel wonder and excitement right alongside the characters. In Starclimber, the zoological stuff is mostly played for a laugh, a bit of a scare, and then nothing, as though Oppel realized he HAD to include A creature, and so he threw it into the plot grudgingly.
All the wit and charm is gone from this book, except for a liiiittle bit of the banter between Matt and Kate. Most of the humor is stupid and slapsticky instead of wry and clever. And the Matt and Kate relationship is dead to me. Matt behaves like a clingy, whiny baby for most of the story, a veeeeeeeeery different Matt from the first book, and he frankly doesn't deserve Kate. She spends the book defying societal expectations and forging her way toward what she wants, and Matt spends the whole time willfully misunderstanding and complaining about those efforts. He has absolutely zero trust in her, having developed NO spine from Skybreaker to now, assuming she's going to leave him at the drop of every hat, getting lowkey angry at her at every turn, even when she makes out with his face and nearly pins him against a WALL to help prove her feelings, among other things. He asks her to marry him at the exact worst moment and gets mad at her when she doesn't immediately say yes. Matt is kind of turning into the worst, and when Kate does accept his proposal at the end of the book, I was like nnnnnooooopppeee.
Matt is actually still pretty cool when he's with the crewmembers. He and Tobias have waayyyy more chemistry than he and Kate do tbh. I loved Tobias, he is super precious and a solid reason as to why I was able to make it through the first 60% of the book. Because the first 60% is nothing but buildup for the very, very underwhelming flight/climb/voyage. The training stuff was interesting, especially when it looks like someone close to Matt is trying to kill him and Tobias, but all of that goes nowhere.
Like, there is no plot? None? This is an adventure novel, and there's? No plot? Not only are the reasons for launching the Starclimber super vague, especially compared to the hyper-focused quests of the last two books, the whole subplot where there's people trying to wreck the tower in Paris and sabotage the voyage was actually really tense and interesting! And there's setup for twists and deeper looks into all of that cool subplot, setup EVERYWHERE, and literally zero payoff. It legit feels like a completely different author wrote this book. That entire subplot disappears into thin air, going nowhere.
Worse yet, stuff happens for no good reason. All the development feels so completely contrived. Things happen because of contrived stuff in the previous books for sure, but it never FEELS contrived because it's written elegantly, and ties into character and theme nicely. But Oppel shamelessly pulls stuff out of his butt every other chapter in this book, especially during the climb. EVEN WORSE, it's not just convenient saves - it's convenient PROBLEMS, and even greater sin imo, because in this book the problems keep happening over... and over... and over... and over, on all the beats exactly where you expect them. Not because there's any setup or payoff for stuff, but because you're like aahhh yes, I can feel Oppel about to make stuff up again for no reason. And it is this exact story structure that stretches this book out for not even 400 pages.
Like, you couldn't even fill 400 large-print pages with a steady plot? You HAD to string and stretch it out with meaningless problem after meaningless problem again and again? And when there's no problem for just one second, Matt has to get angry at Kate and jealous at everyone (INCLUDING AN OLD SCIENTIST SHE IS HAVING AN ARGUMENT WITH, WHYYY) who comes near Kate to fake more tension? UUGGHHH.
I'm mad because Skybreaker was good and Airborn was fantastic. We deserved a better ending to the series. But it feels like this was a one-off idea Oppel had, and was pressured by the publishers to stick on a third and final book, so he ran with the idea anyway and threw together whatever he could think of at the last second. Like, Miss Karr is funny-ish, but utterly pointless to the story. The monkey is even more pointless. Hugh is half-pointless. And then there's all the shamelessly snipped-off series-wide plotlines. Skybreaker committed this sin as well, but there's hardly anymore mentions of Matt's father? He was SO IMPORTANT in Airborn and aroused so many poignant emotions in Matt and in us, but then he disappeared. We're introduced to the rest of the fam because I think Oppel just felt like he needed to stretch the book out longer. The entire garden party was pointless as well. What about Matt graduating from the Academy? Becoming an actual captain? Going back to the Aurora? Kate being an actual legit pilot now? You know - all the stuff we've actually been caring about this entire time.
Wow I am salty. But it is seriously because this series can do better, and it had to end like this. I get the feeling that Oppel just wanted to be free of this series, which is fine, but now I have to try and pretend that this book doesn't exist, and that's gonna take a lot of effort. There are spelling and grammar mistakes in the book as well. This whole thing reads like a shaky beginning draft that just got rushed through the publisher. Sad.
Anyway, you can catch me clinging to Airborn and hesitantly poking at Skybreaker. Third book what? Who? I can't read suddenly.