Above all, a Foreword sums up the first volume so that you are absolutely lost when starting this second chapter of the story. Furthermore we find attached a glossary and some charts very welcome. Additionally, hints and little reminders are scattered throughout the narrative, so that they re-immersed quickly in history.
In the first volume we know the universe was created by the author through several characters that we continue to follow in this book. They thus gaining in depth and become truly engaging.
The always very simple style, fluid and clear, associated with very short chapters (3-5 pages) jumping from one character to another, make that one does not get bored for a second.
Fortunately, because it must be said that it does not happen much in this episode, apart from quite late explanation of the erratic behavior of hydrogues Kikliss and robots in an ancestral war whose human and Ildirans could well be that Viewers vulgar and insignificant.
In conclusion, a quite entertaining tome despite its flaws and do not demand more to attack this: Storms on the Horizon