Honestly, I had a perfectly fine time reading this. It’s swift and easily consumable. However, it lacks any truly captivating elements and ultimately doesn’t leave an impact. The story is intriguing on paper but in execution it feels like little more than a hodgepodge of scenes we’ve seen before but without the hook. I think part of this issue is because while the story is pretty interesting, there’s really not much to ponder beneath it. What you see is what you get. Which is why is nice to read but not something to ever reflect on. It also ends in the weakest way possible. We reach an exciting and tension filled climax in the third act and then the characters have another task left to do. The task, unfortunately, looses the previously prominent sense of urgency and slowly drains the story of any urgency before abruptly ending without a real sense of resolution. Even books with a sequel should come to an end with some sense of closure for the immediate story that was told.
The one thing I did like, especially early on, was the atmosphere. During the opening chapters I was really pleased with how the setting was described. I was able to immediately visualize and enter the world at hand. I think this immersion is lost a bit towards the end, as the focus becomes more on action and less on tone, but it was still strong throughout.
There’s also a weird male gaze dominated undertone that was odd. The contrast of how the female character in the duo was described and handled was noticeably more “sexed up” (I’m sorry to use that term), than the male protagonist. I mean, I’m not against characters being overtly sexual in nature if that makes sense for them but that’s not the case her. She’s just a regular women except she just has sex with the lead as “a test” or some other BS. It just feels like the most primal of fantasies and reeks of a lack of restraint.
Overall, it’s fine. If you’re really into sci fi, I think it’s probably worth a read. Will I read the sequel? Unlikely.