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A review by mon_ique
The Second Wave by Tom Reynolds
4.0
4 and 1/2 really...
I'm not sure how I feel about the jump between what happened in the last book and going right into dealing with thousands of metas now...
At the same time, it was a great way to speed things up into action instead of describing extra scenes, but...
Anyways, this is about Connor (and the rest of the world) dealing with hundreds/thousands of metabands and everybody wanting them (black market for metabands *whoop*).
The Agency (continuing my comparison to the flash (which I'm surprised now that someone never created an Agency..), the division of the police force on metahumans) had already created a place for bad metas from the first wave, so it is again utilized on the second wave of bad people who somehow got metabands. Now, the Agency made things a little different from the last book.
Remember how I compared the violence and view of life with the Flash?
With the introduction of the Agency, it would probably be best to consider this in relation to the Arrow.
Maybe a bit less from the Arrow (as Agency interrogation scenes aren't throughout the novel), but on the same plane.
I'm not sure how I feel about the jump between what happened in the last book and going right into dealing with thousands of metas now...
At the same time, it was a great way to speed things up into action instead of describing extra scenes, but...
Anyways, this is about Connor (and the rest of the world) dealing with hundreds/thousands of metabands and everybody wanting them (black market for metabands *whoop*).
The Agency (continuing my comparison to the flash (which I'm surprised now that someone never created an Agency..), the division of the police force on metahumans) had already created a place for bad metas from the first wave, so it is again utilized on the second wave of bad people who somehow got metabands. Now, the Agency made things a little different from the last book.
Remember how I compared the violence and view of life with the Flash?
With the introduction of the Agency, it would probably be best to consider this in relation to the Arrow.
Maybe a bit less from the Arrow (as Agency interrogation scenes aren't throughout the novel), but on the same plane.