Although the blurb really doesn't give any clues beyond what was pretty much established in book one, this really was a much better book, structure and story-wise. More things happened, there were clearer goals and objectives, and, after a slowish start, it was paced better.
However, there are two more or less related things in this book that I'd somehow entirely forgotten from my first reading, that I found very difficult to swallow.
The first is mandatory child-bearing. While I understand the reasoning for it, I don't think McCaffrey handled it very well. For starters, we didn't get any of the debate leading to the decision, just delivery of that decision to Kris. And I really feel that an issue like that, if you're going to bring it up in your book, you really need to do it properly, and that includes discussing the pros and cons fully, and maybe even delving into the philosophies behind both sides of the arguments, and so on and so forth. But there is a lot to discuss about it, and to gloss over that part entirely felt very... well it felt like McCaffrey knew she wasn't a good enough author to bring both sides out without painting everyone like either selfish child-haters or domineering controllers. But I think she continued to do the issue a disservice with Kris's reaction to it. Initially, she freaks, entirely understandably as she had a very active and somewhat risky occupation on the planet, had chosen a mate she was biologically incompatible with and thus had no plans for kids ever, and even if she had wanted any, it wouldn't have been for some time yet. So she's decidedly nonplussed at the thought of being required to bear at least a child or two, for the sake of the colony's long-term success. However, she also gets over it way too quickly, if you ask me, and tells herself she's just being silly. She's not. Procreation is a very big deal, and I hate that this issue was ultimately dismissed as though it isn't. Maybe it's just because I myself am fiercely protective of my rights to decide what does and does not live in my body, but I just found the presentation of this as a done deal, and Kris's almost immediate more-or-less acceptance of it rather disturbing.
Then there's the second issue. It was stated explicitly that they had the technology to do artificial insemination, and Kris made it very clear very early and to anyone who broached the subject of fathering her child, that that would be the method she would use, if she had to bear a child. She had no intention whatsoever of being unfaithful to her mate, even if he was accepting of the whole situation. And yet, after she breaks her arm and has to stay home from a mission that she was supposed to go on with Zainal, she's miserable, lonely, and drunk as a skunk on the only analgesic they have available: moonshine. And one of the other characters, who we're supposed to like, takes her home and ends up sleeping with her. I was so nauseated by this that it made the rest of the book hard to read. It doesn't matter that she didn't protest. It doesn't even matter that she enjoyed it. To take advantage like that of a woman in the state she was in has a legal name, and it kills me to see that ignored entirely. The individual in question later claims that he was also so drunk he barely remembers what happened, and thus wasn't in his right mind at the time either, but I don't buy that. If you're so drunk you weren't functioning right in the head to the point of not knowing what you're doing and not remembering it later, you're drunk enough that you're not functioning right in other parts, either. You certainly wouldn't be good at it. Maybe if the sex had been described as being hopelessly sloppy and awkward, I could buy it. But not when it's described as being very good. If you were that good, you were not so drunk that you can't claim responsibility. End of story. So yeah. The way that whole situation was handled was something I found extremely distasteful, and in fact, downright offensive. The fact that that is how she ends up pregnant just adds salt to the wound. I just hated that whole situation, and I can't even begin to express how disappointed I am in Anne McCaffrey for how she wrote it. I just... I really can't.