artkat:

Hi! Sooo here’s a comparison thingie for you! Why? I dunno

I already had the first set so I figured I’d tack the most recent ones on since I actually got around to doing all the characters.

First ones I’m not totally sure of the date, but I’m thinking 2010/11ish. Middle is 2012, last is now.

Practice makes perfect, kids!

Although I still think 2012 Marco is kinda hot

anyway the point is NEVER GIVE UP. Cuz in five years I’m gonna do another one of these and probably blow everyone’s minds, including myself. 2010 me would be very impressed.

But you can’t judge a book by its cover, dammit! In actuality, the grave seriousness of Animorphs is what stands out most in my memories. This isn’t 10,000 pages of kids turning into butterflies. It’s a 10,000 page chronicling of war, and the central themes of the series are appropriately aligned with that subject matter. Once you’ve suspended your disbelief and firmly settled yourself into the bizarre sci-fi nature of the material, what you’ve got is five teenagers who struggle with things like dehumanization, the responsibility or leadership, sanity, insanity and morality. It is told with the horror of actual war, where the battle is not only physical, but mental as well. Is it right to kill unarmed enemies? Is it right to ask a team member and friend to carry out a dangerous mission? Is it right to retreat, to continue, to do anything? Horrible things happen with surprising frequency in this series. Characters you’ve grown attached to have mental break-downs, crumble under the pressure, cease to be heroes. In fact, a lot of this series serves to debunk childish notions of battle and war as being something magnificent and heroic. The battles that are fought are not great feats or victories, but rather a series of jumbled, confusing actions that leave regret and sickness in the hearts of those who fought. Each decision, whether in the heat of battle or for the greater good, comes later to haunt the character who made it, and they forever feel the weight of their actions and their own short-comings.

Animorphs, First and Last Spoken Words

springagainafter:

raiyning:

Jake
“Not much. We’re heading home”
“Ram the Blade ship.”

Marco
“Out of quarters, certain people keep forgetting that the SleazeTroll shows up right after the Nether Fjord. So certain people keep loosing the game— and loosing our quarters.”
“Okay, this is unexpected.”

Tobias
“What’s up?”
<Ax?>

Rachel
“Are you going to come and protect us, you big strong m-a-a-a-n? You think we’re helpless just because—”
“I love you.”

Cassie
“I’d appreciate it if they did walk with us, I know you’re not afraid of anything Rachel, but I guess I am.”
“He doesn’t hate you, Jake. He never did. His heart was broken, that’s all. And you know, Tobias never had anyone. No one before Rachel. No mother, really, no father he could ever know. Rachel was the first and only person who ever loved Tobias.”

Ax
<Do not move. I stunned you to see what you are. But if you move, I will destroy you.>
<Jake.>

lackofa:

“Don’t look,” Rachel said to her. She put her arm around Cassie’s shoulder and held her close.

Then she reached for Tobias and took his hand. I guess you never really know someone till you see them scared. And even scared to death, with tears running down her face, Rachel had strength to spare.

Some actual Animorphs fanart and none of it is happy because the series opened with an alien getting brutally murdered and eaten while these kids hid and cried.