This book takes all leaps and turns action. There is less character development here and more plot driving...

Here are some of my point form thoughts:
- Nick has totally gone off the deep end in the beginning. Everything that has happened to him through Morn , seeming betrayal of his trusted crew (especially Mikka) and the appearance of Soar, has pushed him over the edge and he is now nearly as bad as Angus --- (remember, Angus had already sold a whole BUNCH of humans to the Amnion years ago...).
- By page 88 & 89, where Nick is giving Morn over to the Amnion, and they ‘force’ Nick to answer the question “Why did you come to Enablement Station”, the crux of how far Nick had gone and possibly may have turned out to be a ‘nice’ guy is revealed. The answer why he risked so much to see the Amnion again to have her son ‘force-grown’? … love. Granted, it is not the pure, virgin, nice love we all like to think about (don’t we?), but it is, what I believe (and interpret as far as SRD writes about it), the beginning of a better path for Nick. But as we stated before, this is a greek tragedy, and things are not meant to be so easy… Nick totally 'loses it' and becomes a huge wrench in everything that follows in this book.
-Poor Morn. Yah, she's a zone addict, but she is such a fighter and her moral inclinations are so rock steady that even in her weakest moments she is thinking of saving 'bad' people from the greater evil of the Amnion. And the description of her when Angus frees her is heart-wrenching...
I just want to appear in that scene and yell bloody murder at Nick and Angus for bringing her to this point

- And Soar... I can't recall what happens to her in the later books, but, MAN, do I want someone to kick her can! (I know it's not Nick ... that loser is on a spiralling path to the bowels of humanity...)
-the action and tension is great! Love it all.
-Holt vs. Warden. I love Warden -- in a purely platonic sense of course...

- Angus.... hmmm, still can't feel sorry for him. Yah, he is linked to Morn, but I can't see it as love in any fashion beyond a 'love' for a toy lost. Like Morn's addiction of her zone implant, he has become an addict of HER. And his forced programming only instill the 'need' further. I think it becomes impossible for Angus to make the destinction between real need/love and addiction.
The comment in another posting stating that Warden, Angus and Milo all started in guttergangs but grew up through their own choices and paths, to completely different lives from each other. The same holds true for 'blaming' Angus' violent and criminal path on his horrible experiences as a child. I think I would have felt more sympathy for Angus if he had made the redemption of his past by his own will, not programming and a 'twisted' notion that he loves Mrn because he had the best sex ever with Morn, could do anything he wished to her, and then she later didn't break their bargain once he was captured. <shudder> Nope, can't sympathize with him at all............. yet. There ARE 2 books to go....

Well, that's all I got for now.