Friday, September 23, 2011

The Final Warning, A Maximum RIde Novel by James Patterson

Max Ride is a perfectly normal teenager...who just happens to be able to fly. She and the other members of the flock - five kids who share her remarkable ability - are asked to help the environmental scientists study global warming. This seems like a great way to have daring fun and escape government forces who are hunting them. But even in harsh, remote Antarctica, Maximum Ride is an irresistible target in constant danger. For whoever controls her power could also control the world. And any final warning she gets may come too late...

3 comments:

  1. In this MAximum Ride Novel, you feel like you are right there with the characters. You feel all the emotions, the anger, the confusuion, the excitment. James Patterson brings in some new characters and changes things up a little bit in a way you wouldn't expect, or at least in a way I didn't expect the first time I read it. The books are still action filled and never get boring. I suggest it to everyone to read. I've read the whole series at least four times and I'm still not bored of the series because it's just that good.

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  2. How are you able to experience the characters' emotions with them? Is it the adjective? What is the author doing to draw you into that story?

    When you re-read the story do you find new things in the text that you don't remember? Are you able to understand references, plot, etc. better because you already know the story? I love to re-read my favorites because I'm always surprised by the information the author reveals that I passed without notice upon my first reading, when I had to pay more attention to the overall plot structure and keeping characters straight.

    Thanks for sharing!

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  3. When reading the book, the way that James Patterson will describe the scene, you just feel like you're right there caught up in the action. You feel like you are one of the characters or you feel like you're right there watching. James Patterson describes what's around the characters and everything that they're doing, so it's really easy to picture in your mind.
    When I re-read the book I'll notice something that I missed last time, or I'll understand something better the second time around because I don't have such a strong urgency to keep reading. I have the time to go back and read something again to fully understand it.

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