Before we get into the minor character discussions, there is a topic I've been wanting to bring up here - discrimination and how they are dealt with and portrayed in the books. We see examples of racism, speciesism, sexism, and discrimination against the disabled, but they're all examined to different degrees and in different ways
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It was a little strange that race wasn't talked about and the issue wasn't addressed as much, but then, it was a non-issue among the Animorphs and the only scene Cassie's got about it is while time-traveling in the distant past. Not sure if that's the right message to send but the books were aimed at a young demographic; maybe they just weren't allowed to talk too openly about racism because it was and is a touchy issue and hoped that by not treating Marco and Cassie as different types of characters because they weren't white that it'd impart a lesson of not turning people into others, "We're not different inside", etc. Given that it's an intense series otherwise with the war theme, though, I don't think that that's quite the best they could've done. And yeah, lots of kids grow up more assimilated/"white" so maybe Marco really didn't have much of a connection to a generation-removed culture, but I think considering Cassie's parents and her personality that she probably did have a solid knowledge of her background, of cultural stuff, of what society was like before with racial divides and how far it still has to go. We could've at some point been shown how important her black identity is to her, whether she brings it up often or not - just mentioning reading a Rosa Parks picture book aloud when she's little, you know. I think Cassie, being kind of a mad liberal treehugging peace activist girl, would really respect and identify with stuff that she'd know from childhood like most kids - black rights movements and MLK's speeches and know Thurgood Marshall, that sort of thing, even if she doesn't focus on just one aspect of the history of peace and is focused more on the animals and environment than social reform.
Especially considering the recurring disability thing - Andalites kick them out of society, and all the Animorphs have a knee-jerk reaction to this, but when it comes down to it they seek out people who are disabled to use as soliders, sacrifice them, and accept as the lieutenant one who is healed. I don't know what to take from that.
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I wish we'd gotten to see more of the auxiliaries beyond #50. #50 was like "holy crap interesting social/philosophical questions!" and then they NEVER got brought up again, even in the context of the auxiliaries.
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It always kind of bugged me that the character with cerebral palsy wasn't healed because CP, while almost always congential, isn't genetic.
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I did like that at one point when Ax is reflecting on "Hey maybe my society's approach isn't entirely awesome," he points out that humans also screw up, and I think there's another time when he actually says in a discussion that humans often do exactly the same thing (cloistering people away), but it might have been nicer to have one of those revelations come from one of the human kids.
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