True confession: I was pretty quite totally exasperated fed up with Dash by the end of the last book, "Between You and Me." So I'm pleased delighted overjoyed to report that "Again with Feeling" is a return to form. 4.5/5, that is.
Toward the very end, Dash gets excited because he's had a brainstorm about a novel genre: "cozy noir." Which might be a good label for this book, which is in some ways darker and in every way more melancholy than any of the previous installments, but whose resolution gives both Dash and Bobby the impetus to finally, finally, FINALLY!!! (hello, Millie) be honest about their feelings.
Which I know is technically a spoiler, but if you've quailed at the prospect of yet more Dashly waffling then I say gird your loins, grit your teeth, and get ready for that sweet, sweet sigh of relief, as well as (if you're me) a whole lot of crying. My eyes were still sore the next morning, is what I'm saying here.
Speaking of Dashly waffling: This is the book in which, for I think the first time, we see Dash's and Bobby's behavior through Bobby's eyes, and that made me think about authorial choices of POV. All the books up to this point have hewed tightly to Dash's first-person point of view, and while it's obvious that thanks to his anxiety and self-doubt he's an (exceptionally) unreliable narrator, and while the commentariat -- i.e., the other Last Picks -- offers an outside perspective, that perspective mostly consists of eye-rolling over his and Bobby's obliviousness. Also, though Dash has some insight into Bobby, he idealizes him: distortion, again.
So the conversation in which Bobby describes his own perceptions of Dash, and his actions with respect to Dash, provides some revelations. GA mostly writes dual POV (only the Holloway Holmes books excepted, as far as I can remember), and maybe seeing these stories unfold from Bobby's POV as well as from Dash's would have made Dash less maddening. (Though it would likely have gotten in the way of some of the mystery plots. Tradeoffs!)
Anyway, I'm wholeheartedly back on board with this series. Even though I know, I just know, that freaking Hugo is going to show up to ruin things. Thanks to GA for the ARC, this is my honest opinion, etc.