
The main reason all books in The Hallows series feel the same is because of the lack of personal growth on the part of the characters. Rachel still makes rash decisions that put people in danger, and only work out because someone comes along and bails her out at the last second. If she was forced to rely solely on the plan she concocted as written, Rachel wouldn't make it through the first 10 chapters in any of her books. But, with the help of her friends (and sometimes her enemies), Rachel survives to run another day. Though to what end is anyone's guess. It's not like she has any great aspirations for her life. All she wants to do is be a small time runner, occasionally helping people out of sticky situations for a fee. She doesn't have the heartbreaking backstory that makes for a great hero. Sure, there's some sad stuff in her past. Sure, they say she's the only one who'll be able to save mankind from the demons. But she doesn't seem all that interested in worrying about any of that. She'd rather just hang out with her vampire ex-girlfriend and their pixy roommate.
The only redeeming aspect of this book is the changes that Jenks undergoes. Though not by choice, he discovers his own strength and resilience, and finds that he has the personal fortitude to overcome the limits of his genetics. (Apparently, pixies aren't supposed to live after the death of their spouse, nor more than 20 years, nor with all of their children still around them. But Jenks keeps finding himself moving past the genetic pre-dispositions of his kind.)
Add to the story the complete absence of physical descriptions of places and you constantly feel like your floating along in a empty space, watching Rachel's actions, but never feeling what she's feeling, or even able to follow along with her train of thought, which jumps faster than a demon can ride a ley line, and can land just about anywhere. Her thoughts about herself don't make the character any more likable, as she calls herself a whore for having 4 relationships in the span of 2 years.
Rachel Morgan is not the hero the world needs, hers or ours.
No comments:
Post a Comment