Following Lifel1k3 (2018), the scattered heroes grapple with whom to trust.
A quick yet thorough frontmatter recap primes readers to jump right into action where the first volume left off. Eve, gathering her newfound siblings while having a violent identity crisis after traumatic revelations, gets less screen time, allowing other cast members to shine. Her best friend, white Lemon Fresh, moves into a heroine role after escaping with logika Cricket and lifelike Ezekiel. But Cricket’s new robot body runs out of power, prompting Ezekiel to leave on a quest for batteries. After he’s gone, Lemon’s situation becomes desperate due to radiation sickness, which leaves her vulnerable to a BioMaas hunter, as that corporation wants to use her deviate abilities against Daedalus. Her storyline sends her to a Brotherhood-controlled city seeking medical care—where she then openly antagonizes the Brotherhood to prevent the execution of fellow deviates (one Asian, one with dark skin), who bring her into company of her own kind. Meanwhile, by the time Ezekiel returns, even Cricket has been stolen—forced to be a battle bot and struggling against Robotics Laws—so Ezekiel must make an unlikely alliance to find Lemon while trying to work through his feelings for both Eve and Ana. The worldbuilding, from lingo to Brotherhood mythology, develops alongside action sequences as the story builds to an exciting cliffhanger.
Solid and fresh, especially for the second installment in a trilogy.
(Science fiction. 12-adult)