Reviews tagging 'Grief'

The Message by K.A. Applegate

4 reviews

lynxpardinus's review

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adventurous dark emotional funny tense

4.75


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kstericker's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5


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magicalghoul's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional hopeful tense fast-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

I felt the terrible hatred surge in me again. But I didn't want to end my life that way. I would not die with hate in my heart. That would be one victory I could deny Visser Three.

♢ 4/62 OF THE ANIMORPHS REREAD
 ⚠ tws for the entire series: war, death, child soldiers, child death, descriptions of gore, body horror, discussions of parental death, slugs, parasites, loss of free will, depictions of PTSD and trauma, ableism, imperialism. 

Cassie's books are known being The Weirdest, but they're also the most poetic of the bunch. She is the emotional center of the Animorphs after all, the one most concerned with the moral consequences of the things they have to do to fight the yeerks, and the professed animal lover.

Her main conflict in regards to morphing is present in her first book and it's a shame that I find it to be, huh, too nonsensical to take it seriously (listen, I really Don't think that turning into a brand new copy of an animal puts you on the same level as a slug taking over a different species' brain and ridding it of free will as it watches helplessly) but something I adore about the series is that it's never condescending about Cassie's kindness and her moral concerns.

Instead it portrays them as her strength and defining feature, and ultimately what helps her Survive over the others— something that ties in with the anti-imperialist and anti-war message of the series. I love her.

Highlights: Cassie reaching out and comforting the rest of the team, that really good interaction with Marco on his balcony, anytime the whales appear, AX'S INTRODUCTION. 

As for the audiobook: Very very happy with Cassie's casting. Particularly loved the voices she did for the other Animorphs (her Tobias' is spot on and her Marco is hysterical) and the way she narrated the bits where the animal instincts took over were So Fun.

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ramiel's review

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dark emotional funny reflective tense fast-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

Overall I'd say Cassie's books, along with Rachel's, happen to be some of my favorites purely because I do love the way Cassie sees the world. This is the first book narrated by Cassie in the series, and I think it does a good job introducing her character properly (as all the kids' "first books" do) and giving her a starting point, a base, a reason to fight. 

Like Jake to Tom, Rachel to Melissa and "other peoples' relationships", to Tobias deciding to live as a human and a hawk, to Marco and his mother and family, to Ax and his culture - at the end of the book Cassie is determined to continue to fight when Ax tells the group that the Yeerks would destroy Earth and cause many creatures to go extinct. 

That voice churned my insides. I felt my own hatred flaring up to match his. The images Ax had painted - an Earth brown and empty and filled with nothing but the slaves of the Yeerks...
I had lived my entire life without feeling hatred. It is a sickening feeling. It burns and burns, and sometimes you think it's a fire that will never go out.

My favorite thing, a bit I forgot happened in this specific book, was the interaction between Marco and Cassie after Marco's near-death-experience (he's had like one per book now it feels). Cassie, the emotional center, the pacifist of the group feels like because she made the decision to go after the message in her dreams that means Marco's near-death was her fault. Marco, blunt, sarcastic, and joking, refuses to accept the apology because he "didn't have to go, and chose to anyway" and going on to tell her that making choices like this, life-and-death, was a part of their lives now, a part they just had to accept (have we mentioned these characters are 13 years old?). It's a good scene, and I don't believe she'd get the same blunt, no nonsense response from Jake or Rachel, the people she's already established as being the closest to in the group, this early in the series (as they're both incredibly soft towards her), and it does a good job in building up the relationships and team dynamics that would continue into the following books.

Setting aside one thing I didn't like in this book first: it's the introduction of the constant argument through the books that "morphing a sentient creature is just like taking control of a sentient creature" and that still makes No Sense To Me. Still, that Cassie's allowed the room to explore the ethics and morality of morphing and the war itself without tearing her down is something I love. While I wish the reasoning made more sense, I think that the broader theme of "ethics during war" is very important to Cassie's development, and really makes her character.

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