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Kara Babcock's Reviews > The Suspicion

The Suspicion by K.A. Applegate
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bookshelves: 2016-read, ebook, science-fiction, young-adult

Another Cassie book, more in the vein of #14: The Unknown than #19: The Departure. Applegate experiments with absurdism here With slightly more sophisticated humour than “hah hah, it’s an Andalite toilet!”—riffs on gender and politics and, of course, bureaucracy�The Suspicion holds a little more appeal on the comedic front. Also, the story is better, even if the ending is a hot mess.

Instead of Area 51 and horses, this time we get Helmacrons. Ax doesn’t know of them, but Visser Three seems to recognize them. Tiny and terrifying only in their minds, the Helmacrons are bent on galactic domination. It’s like those aliens in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy who journey to Earth to destroy it after overhearing Arthur Dent’s wormhole-traversing insult. Except instead of being swallowed by a dog, the Helmacrons find the Escafil device (which everyone, even Ax, just calls the blue box). They want to use its power for evil but instead just end up shrinking the Animorphs. Hilarity ensues.

Cassie, as the narrator, ends up making some neat deductions about the physics of their diminutive state. Even Visser Three is impressed, in his own way, when he catches up with her discoveries, including how to seize an advantage over the Helmacrons. Applegate continues to establish Cassie as the Tactician, the one who can size up a situation and see the options available to the Animorphs.

I also found the opening exchange between Cassie and Rachel about clothes and C/ake very endearing. Applegate is not subtle about how the two female Animorphs are worlds apart, yet they remain friends. Cassie tolerates going to the beach because it’s what Rachel wants to do. Meanwhile, Applegate acknowledges that the Aniomrphs have Real Teen Feelings, without letting those feelings and that drama take over the story like in some YA series. (Seriously, , and you care about who’s taking whom to the prom?)

More and more, these humourous breaks in the series make Animorphs feel like a network television show. Star Trek: The Next Generation and especially Star Trek: Deep Space Nine used to do this: every so often there would be a light-hearted episode. Usually they end being among the least-liked of the series, but once in a while they offer compelling counterpoints to the heavier stuff happening around them. I’d be remiss if I didn’t give a shout-out to the DS9 episode that also features shrinking humour.

I would have liked this book better if the ending had been more tightly plotted. As it is, the story wraps up abruptly. Applegate handwaves a truce between Visser Three and the Animorphs long enough for everyone to become regular size and walk away safely. I’m not saying that’s unbelievable, but I think it deserved more attention than it gets here. But it’s as if she reached her word limit, didn’t want to revise, and just said, “Fuck it: everyone lives! Happy? Oh, and they all got unshrunk.�

At the time, reading these books as each one came out, The Suspicion would have been a good instalment. It would be a satisfying fix until the next book. However, re-reading a long-running book series sometimes feels like re-watching a TV series—there are episodes you just don’t care to revisit, not necessarily because they are bad, but because they are silly, or you’ve seen them one too many times, and they don’t really add much. You might watch it in the rotation, sure, but it’s not like when you have friends over you’re going to pull it out and say, “Ah, yes, let’s read this one!�

My reviews of Animorphs:
� #23: The Pretender | #25: The Extreme

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Reading Progress

January 7, 2016 – Started Reading
January 7, 2016 – Shelved
January 7, 2016 –
100.0%
January 7, 2016 – Finished Reading
January 25, 2016 – Shelved as: 2016-read
January 25, 2016 – Shelved as: ebook
January 25, 2016 – Shelved as: science-fiction
January 25, 2016 – Shelved as: young-adult

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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Alex Great review, you put this into words better than I could have. It felt a little out of place after the heavier tone of the last few books.


Aurakinski I find it interesting that Cassie is the one who figures out the physics, yet earlier in the series she had never heard of Stephen Hawking. Not that you can’t understand physics without knowing famous scientists, it’s just� Odd.


Brad Hopkins This was one of the ones I was very eagerly looking forward to rereading. It’s such goofy schlock but I love these breaks in the story’s grittiness where Applegate just let it get weird.


Kara Babcock Brad wrote: "This was one of the ones I was very eagerly looking forward to rereading. It’s such goofy schlock but I love these breaks in the story’s grittiness where Applegate just let it get weird."

It’s like the fun filler episodes back when TV shows were more than two episodes per season!


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