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mellowbry 's review for:

3.5
adventurous dark mysterious tense fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

I think I'm feelin' it with this one, folks: the dreaded, satisfying realization that I am half through this series...and it's starting to feel like a long ride. Which is quite ironic considering this book's pacing is somehow even faster than the previous installments.
The pacing was a problem particularly in the middle, where Gregor and the rest of the team are in the jungle facing new threats, like poisonous dart frogs, lakes, and plant life; meeting new allies,
the believed long-dead uncle of Luxa, Hamnet and his Halflander son, Hazard;
and finding
Luxa who had been missing since the last book.
The jungle is a new territory of worldbuilding for the Underlander series, so we should've spent a slower amount of time within that setting.
Another element that was lacking was the emotional resonance prevalent throughout the story. For their third trip, Gregor's mother journeys into the Underland with Gregor and Boots. Unfortunately, she contracts the warmblood's curse, forcing her children to find a cure for her, Ares, and others infected. The scene of Gregor leaving his sickened mother and, later, seeing her again upon his return from the jungle, was endearing;
likewise, their reunion in the fourth book will be too.
However, Gregor's relationship to his mother was the only strong emotional point of the story.
To be completely honest, I did not care all that much that Hamnet died.

There is another twist in this installment. Although it delivered that mystery punch
who would've thought Solovet was a war criminal?!
, I feel as though I'm getting slightly better at uncovering the twist just minutes before the characters. ALSO, we spend very little time with the person behind the twist, except for a couple of chapters in the beginning where
she and Vikus
appear to be experiencing marital troubles,
"I love my wife, but her and her biochemical warfare tendencies."
And that's it...There's no natural demonstration of
Solovet's
true nature unfolding. It's just told instead of shown...
Well. Anyway. Onto book 4!....