At the end of the trilogy, Senator Golden brought Jakkin, Akki, Auricle (breeding dragon), and the tiny hatchling back to the nursery where now we see the master/bonder society has changed...for the better. Senator Golden also wishes to remain a senator, so we have a plot point in this book that involves politics and a debate stage, which, surprisingly, does NOT bog down the story. It's written cleverly enough to include humor and not get bogged down in too much political mumbo jumbo. There's a hint of suspense, which I won't give away, that gets you turning the pages pretty quickly through there...
We have character deaths to remind us Austar IV is an inhospitable planet. We have duplicitous characters to remind us to trust no one. We have self-centered dragons to remind us these large creatures have minds/needs of their own. (I enjoyed the dragons sending their emotions, colors, visuals back and forth.) And we have a motherly cook in the character named Kkarina, who, for some reason, we are constantly, throughout the book, reminded, is heavy-set.
I saw two themes in the book:
from page 37: "And anyone, he warned himself, no matter how careful, can trip himself up over a lie."
from page 52: "Jakkin wondered if his own unease had more to do with the fact that he'd had to win his own freedom with hard work. Bonders used to say, 'I fill my bag myself.' Did they anymore? Why would they, if somehow the hard work of filling a bag no longer mattered?"
I was disappointed in our two main characters, Jakkin and Akki, quite often in this book. While I recognize they're only 16 and 17, respectively, (and I had to find that in the text to remember their ages) they don't always act like young adults. Akki often acts like a much older, much more mature young woman who wants to return to her medical training; Jakkin often acts like a younger boy with knee-jerk reactions to events. Don't get me wrong, his reactions propel the plot/action and keep the reader reading along, but I often found myself rolling my eyes and thinking a lad who had survived a year in the wilds/mountains should be making better decisions.
In the end, the dragons kept me happy. I read this as part of my Dragon Reading Challenge for my booktube channel. A more robust review of the Pit Dragon Trilogy is posted from about a year ago. Now this one is ready, too!