Animorphs #4
by K.A. Applegate
The five Animorphs get some strong hints that a piece of an Andalite spaceship may be crashed in the ocean nearby, and the alien enemies are zeroing in on it. Two of them are also having strange dreams, hearing calls for help. They decide they must find what’s in the ocean, so they morph into dolphins. They handle the time constrictions a little better this time around; Tobias-the-hawk carries a watch now so he can remind them when they’ve been in animal form too long. They manage to travel long distances without getting stuck in dolphin form by flying partway as seagulls, and stowing away on a cargo ship as themselves. Still some awkwardness in their plans, complications they just don’t think of beforehand. As dolphins they run into sharks, and get help from a whale. I suppose since the Animorphs can communicate mentally, receiving messages in dreams and speaking telepathically with real whales shouldn’t be so odd, but it still struck me as a little out there. What they encounter in the ocean- well, let’s say the last few chapters did take me by surprise. It looked like they were doomed to fail, but the aliens showed a surprising vulnerability. And they find a young Andalite (Ax is the shortened name they give him) who had been left behind when all his companions died in the war. That character caught my interest again- his apparent standoffish manner, the gulf of their understanding. It made the last two chapters better than all the rest, the foil of alien nature. There’s also a kind of moral dilemma arising in Cassie’s mind- she feels uneasy with her struggle against the animal nature when morphing, compares it to how the aliens enslave humans. Others point out this isn’t a fair comparison: they are acquiring DNA and becoming a new animal individual, not actually taking over the mind of an existing animal. Still, it’s something to think about.
Yet for some reason, I didn’t enjoy this book as much as the others so far. The writing is not quite as good. There were several parts where the phrasing seemed downright juvenile- not as if it were aimed at a young audience, but as if the writing wasn’t polished. The animal transformation scenes didn’t captivate me as much, either (and those are really what I read it for). If this is a hint of quality to come, I don’t know how far I’ll keep reading in the series. The opening scene where Cassie morphed into a squirrel to spy on a fox- that one was a bit funny in spite of her panic.
Borrowed from the public library. Previous book in the series. Next book.
Rating: 2/5 154 pages, 1996
4 Responses
Were all the books in this series written by the same person? Maybe that's why this one is weaker.
As far as I know, \”K.A. Applegate\” is a husband-wife writing team. Not until book #25 in the series (which runs to 64) are some of them ghostwritten. However I wonder if this one was the first written more by one spouse than the other? just a guess.
I didn't realize so many of these books were actually written by the same people! I had also been assuming that they were done by an assortment of folks — maybe they were just under too tight a deadline on this one.
Perhaps. I've seen other readers remark this is one of the weakest in the series, so I'm hopeful to continue. Waiting for another to show up on hold at the library…