Book Review: Confessions of A Murder Suspect, by James Patterson

confessions_murder_suspectJames Patterson is one of my favorite authors, and since he’s also one of the world’s highest paid authors, clearly others share this opinion.  When I saw his latest collaboration with Maxine Paetro, Confessions of A Murder Suspect, I knew I had to read it.

The basic premise of the story is the investigation of the apparent murders of Malcolm and Maud Angel. The Angels are a very powerful family, heading up a huge pharmaceutical company and hedge funds, and it would seem that the list of suspects would be huge. The cops however, narrow the list done to one of the couple’s children given that their deaths occurred in a locked, extremely secure and exclusive apparent complex. Tandy Angel, one of the couple’s children, is not going to sit around and wait for the cops to conduct their investigation so she starts one of her own. Throughout the book family secrets and conspiracies arise and nothing is as it first seems. “Confession” chapters break up the main story and give us more insight into the lives of the Angels.

I personally have mixed feelings about this book. When I was reading it, I was fully engrossed and it kept me turning pages… after I had finished, however, I wasn’t quite so sure anymore. A lot of what makes the story so interesting is the many mysteries that the plot centers on, and once the secrets are revealed, the story loses something. It’s not that the answers to the many questions are underwhelming or unbelievable exactly– they just weren’t what I thought, and a lot of it wasn’t really justified in my mind.

The thing that I had the biggest problem with in this book was the final “who done it” explanation. Without giving anything away, suffice it to say that knowing all of the information about Malcom and Maud that is revealed by that point in the book, it doesn’t seem well justified that their deaths occurred in the way that they did. It was mainly the way that Malcom’s death occurred that bothered me- Maud’s was fairly well explained- but I just can’t fathom why Malcom’s death occurred the way that it did, knowing all of the information about Maud.

On the flip side, I think that the book’s strongest point is the careful balancing of several plots lines. While the main focus is the murder investigation, there are several other mysterious that are expertly tied into the main plot. I loved the many family secrets that the Angel family contained and never felt bored.

Another of the book’s strong features are the “Confession” chapters. They’re a unique way to add more information to the story that wouldn’t have necessarily been easily tied into the story if it was written in the traditional chapter format. There are just enough of these to add something extra to the plot without drowning it out.

When the book ended I was mostly satisfied with the way that things were wrapped up and most of my questions had been put to rest. That being said, room was left open for a sequel, which will hopefully fill in any reaming gaps and extend the story of the Angel family.

-Angela J., 12th grade

Book Review: Stormbreaker, by Anthony Horowitz

stormbreakerImagine what it would be like to work for a top-secret spy agency, let alone only being a teenager! This is the life of one unfortunate schoolboy, who is left orphaned at an early age. Written by Anthony Horowitz, Stormbreaker is an action-packed novel filled with adventure. Set in present-day England, a fourteen year old boy named Alex Rider is suddenly thrown into a deadly situation.

When Alex’s uncle mysteriously dies in a car accident, he is forced to take his uncle’s place as a spy in MI6, Britain’s top-secret spy organization. Little does he know that he is being tossed into a dangerous mission to spy on Herod Sayle, the mastermind behind the newest computer, Stormbreaker. Using pure instinct and his intelligence, Alex must fight for his life, as well as save the people of the Britain.

Anthony Horowitz writes Stormbreaker in a very unique way. He builds suspense in every inch of the book, is very descriptive in detail, and is very creative. From Alex being recruited as a spy to dodging bullets, this book makes your heart constantly race with anxiety. I thought Alex is a very brave and likable boy and if he were actually real, I would have liked to have met him. However, I thought Horowitz made this book a little too unrealistic. It is quite impossible for me to imagine Alex being able to escape from circumstances that most fourteen-year-old boys (let alone adults) cannot survive from. For example, how can Alex get caught in a fifteen feet deep and 30 feet long tank with a giant jellyfish and still manage to survive?

I would rate this book nine out of ten because it was fast paced and kept me on the edge of my seat the whole time. I recommend this book for kids ages ten to sixteen who love action, suspense, and mystery all mixed together in one book. I absolutely enjoyed Stormbreaker and will certainly read the rest of the Alex Rider series!

-Riley W., 6th grade

Book Review: Lord of the Flies, by William Golding

lord_of_the_flies_coverHave you ever wondered what it would be like to be stuck on a stranded island with other people, oh wait, I’m sorry– I mean, other kids? Imagine all that freedom! But could all that freedom lead into something horrible or evil?

Well then, you should read Lord of the Files by William Golding. A fictional story taking place in the “near future,” it is a story about a group of boys who crash land on a stranded island. They all realize later that there are absolutely no adults that survived the terrible crash. This book has some suspenseful moments that keep you reading until you literally fall off your chair.

Mr.Golding also did a wonderful job using figurative language to describe his beloved, and ruthless characters and the strange and creepy island the boys are on. I must say, though, that you have to be at least in 8th grade to read this book. The reason is because there are many scenes that do have some violence that may not be suitable for a 7th grader or below. Also because many times in the book the author tends not to say what is happening or actually what happened. The author really wants you to figure out what is actually happening, he wants you to analyze the story.

If there are any readers out there that really like suspenseful, and adventure type books, this is the book for you!

-Robert N., 10th grade

Book Review: Brain Jack, by Brian Falkner

brain_jack_coverThis book review is part of series of reviews written by students at St. Margaret’s Episcopal School for their 7th grade English classes.

What has America come to? In a year where there are no more drug addicts, a new addiction as risen above the surface. Gaming. And in the city of New York “Gray clouds were leaking a dreary, misty drizzle from high over the city, but low on the horizon there was a long thin gap in which the sun had risen, teasing New York with a short-lived promise of a sunny day” (8-9). This is how Brian Falker explains the setting and I feel like I could live there.

Sam and his best friend Fargas are teen hackers, now they take hacking much more serious than you think. Sam and Fargas just hacked into the largest Internet provider in all of the US: Telecommercial. When they succeed, the power in the whole US goes out for three whole days. Sam did all this to get the latest in neutro headset technology.

Brain Jack by Brian Falkner is the best. The Brian Falkner made my heart pump, sweat drip, and I almost felt like my Brain was jacked, making me feel like I had to keep reading. Brian Falkner is a pristine writer and has been with computers his entire life. He writes in sucks way that you feel in it. You feel like you want say “no Sam don’t do that” but you can’t, and you just have to keep reading.

After Sam hacked into Telecommercial, he got caught and was sent to jail. Miraculously he escaped and because of his hacking skills, he was picked up by a secret government organization. When the secret government organization starts to use neutro headsets, which are headsets in which you can control the Internet using your brain, Sam realizes that if a computer can be hacked, so can a neutro head set, resolving in access to the brain. Sam try’s to tell everybody but it’s too late. Everybody is turning against him being controlled by the computer in which they call Ursula.

This author explains something very complex with ease. “There was no Ursula. There had never been. They had given her a name and a gender, spoke of her as if she was human, but that was nothing more than a way for their tiny, pathetic human brains to try to cope with the concept, with the simple idea of a collective consciousness” (334).

This book truly shows the meaning of to much of a good thing can be a bad thing because in the book, all Ursula is trying to do is make everything right; but the problem is, is that poverty is a bad thing, so she will decrease the amount of people in poverty by killing them. Later on in the book she starts to because prejudice erasing entire races she doesn’t like and even certain traits like height and weight.

The rest of this story is to mind bending, brain jacking, head spinning enough to tell you now but if you wish to read whether Sam saves the world, takes down Ursula, and makes a better life for himself, you better get your hands on this addicting book. Anyone who liked The Hunger Games is going to love this book. My brain was jacked from reading this book, I could recommend to anyone! They will love it for sure!

-Gavin C., 7th grade

Book Review: Florida Getaway, by Max Allan Collins

csi_miami_coverThis book review is part of series of reviews written by students at St. Margaret’s Episcopal School for their 7th grade English classes.

I love watching the TV show “CSI: Miami,” so when I found this book, Florida Getaway by Max Allan Collins, I knew that I was going to love it. And I was right, the author painted a picture so vivid in my brain, I could picture what everything looked like. He described what everything looked like, sounded like, and felt like from a person to a house.

In this book, the Las Vegas crime lab is trying to arrest Thomas Lessor for the murder of Erica Hardy. “As the sun set on Las Vegas, bringing night to a city that refused to sleep, an unusual crispness was in the air, a knife edge that keened the senses” (Page 10). When they fail, he flees to Miami to escape arrest, or something else? The Miami Dade police department takes over the investigation only to find Thomas Lessor missing. “Miami is also a place where on each and every sunny day, citizens and visitors, young and old alike, unexpectedly find new and unusual ways to accomplish that fatal task…” (28). Could he be fleeing the country?

Three murders later they find the real, dirty truth and to find out what that is, you will have to read the book yourself. The main character, Lieutenant Horatio Caine, is a serious investigator who will do anything to find the truth. Thomas Lessor, suspect of the murder of Erica Hardy, goes missing when catching a flight to Miami. Daniel Boyle, hotel manager and the number one suspect for a murder. Is he guilty? Maria Chacon, singer in one of Daniel Boyle’s hotels has a couple of affairs going on. Will anyone find out?

Manipulation is everywhere. People will manipulate each other to get what they want. Manipulation is an important aspect that comes up in this novel. Running away from your problems does not help anything especially in this novel. Will running away help Thomas Lessor escape from being arrested or will it make everything worse? People don’t always tell the truth. In this novel, honesty comes to play. You have to be honest to a detective or they will find out the truth from the evidence.

I loved this book because it was so suspenseful and it kept me turning pages. Everything was described so well I always had picture in my brain of what a setting or character looked like. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who likes detectives and likes mysteries and loves to solve problems.

-Ali B., 7th grade

Book Review: The Eleventh Plague, by Jeff Hirsch

eleventh_plague_coverJeff Hirsch’s debut novel The Eleventh Plague is an ominous story of our world ravaged by P-11, a deadly strain of influenza. Stephen is a teenage boy treks across the abandoned landscape of dusty cars and casinos along with his father and grandfather. His grandfather, a strict former Marine, has always led the family by strict rules: scavenge for items they can sell, and don’t get involved in trouble. However, when he dies from the plague, Stephen and his father get into a fight, leaving Stephen with his injured father. After a series of skirmishes, a village called Settler’s Landing accepts them as one of their own. There, Stephen struggles to adapt to the almost normal life despite the aftermath of the plague surrounding them.

Stephen is a logical and loyal character, although sometimes a bit serious and realistic. In spite of this, readers can still easily empathize with him, considering the situations he is in. Completely opposite of him, Jenny is a fun-loving, energetic girl. Clearly full of confidence, she drags Stephen around.

The mood of the story is dark and gloomy, but not quite bordering on horror. Despite the deathly landscape and eerie concept of apocalypse, the story almost has an upward, optimistic tone towards the end. What is most memorable about Hirsch’s novel is the thought that it could happen even in our world. As opposed to an alien invasion, the threat of influenza is very real, and that is what makes The Eleventh Plague so memorable.

-Phillip X., 7th grade

Book Review: The Vicious Deep, by Zoraida Cordova

vicious_deep_coverThis book review is part of series of reviews written by students at St. Margaret’s Episcopal School for their 7th grade English classes.

Have you ever imagined what it feels like to drown? The cold water rushing into your lungs. Being dragged under. Having waves crash over you, tossing you in what we water-people call “the washing machine.”

Scary thought, right? That’s why we have lifeguards. Tristan Hart knows this more than anyone else in his lifeguard troop. The Vicious Deep is a hair-raising, spine-chilling, heart-warming novel about a young man named Tristan Hart and the incredible transformation he undertakes to become one with the ocean… and its residents. Zoraida Cordova has outdone herself in this epic composition of friendship, danger, suspense and fantasy. “This is, by far, one of my best works,” says Cordova. “When I imagined the storyline for this novel, I wanted something…different. I wanted to take something normal, and twist it until it becomes something people would be interested in.” And that is exactly what she did.

The Vicious Deep is a novel that has to do mostly with friendship, fantasy, and above all, the OCEAN. In my opinion, the author was extremely good about keeping the fantasy part fairly realistic. Instead of making it a princess-style fairytale, she turned the story into something a person my age, or older, would want to read. Also, the author did an amazing job with the descriptions of Coney Island and the ocean. They made me actually feel like I was walking down the Island Boardwalk on a summer day, or swimming in the blue-green water. Also, in my opinion, the author did an excellent job of bringing themes into the story. She didn’t talk about the theme for too long, only mentioned it once or twice to get the readers thinking about it. Overall, I believe that Cordova did an excellent job with this book.

The characters in this book are, by far, some of the best characters in any novel I have ever read. The way Cordova describes them: “She has long, curly, shocking red hair that reached down to her waist, and the same eyes I do: Electric green. Her pursed pink lips and furrowed brows mean only one thing: I’m in trouble” (238). But the best part of the book, in my opinion, is when she describes Coney Island and the Boardwalk: “The blue-emerald water, the soft yellow sand, the old wooden boardwalk with its rickety old rides… this is Coney Island. This is home” (13). Overall, the author uses descriptive language that stands out in a time when authors just skip the descriptions and move on to dull plot and storyline.

In conclusion, The Vicious Deep is an amazing book that I would recommend to anyone over the age of 11. It has excellent themes and morals, and comically describes the incredible transformation that happens to the unsuspecting lifeguard Tristan Hart.

-Katie T., 7th grade

Book Review: Stormbreaker, by Anthony Horowitz

stormbreakerAlex Rider’s story begins with a perfect life. Alex is a regular boy who is 14 years old. One night he is awoken by the chime of a doorbell and overhears that his uncle died mysteriously in a car crash. But the weird thing is that the cops were saying he was not wearing his seat belt. His uncle always enforced the rule that no matter what, you have to wear your seatbelt to Alex, and he always followed that rule too. Alex didn’t have enough information to believe the cops.

Alex decides to investigate and discovers that it wasn’t a car crash that killed his uncle– it was murder. At the car dump, he finds that one bullet from a sniper made a crisp circular hole in the glass window. An attempt on his own life kicks off the beginning of Alex’s adventures, and things really get complicated when he learns that his uncle was an MI6 agent– and he must get involved too.

I personally would recommend that this book should be read only if you are older than 12 years old. The reason why is that there is a little bit of violence it the book. Stormbreaker by Anthony Horowitz is a great read!

-Satej B., 7th grade

Book Review: The House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer

house_scorpionThe House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer is a very interesting blend of science fiction and fantasy. It is a very powerful story that shocks its readers due to its graphic, and sometimes disturbing, subject matter. This book can be read by either gender, and anybody who reads this book will most likely enjoy it.  In it, a “boy” named Matteo Alcrán lives in a place between the United States and where Mexico once was.  But, Matteo is not really a boy. He is a clone harvested from the fields for the purpose of being a body part donor to rich elderly men.. Matteo is not any clone, however. He is the clone of the founder of Opium, an elderly man named El Patrón. Matteo is first raised by a worker of El Patrón’s, a woman named Cecelia, whom Matteo believes is his mother, because she loves him very much. One day when some children, relatives of El Patrón, find him and take him away, Matteo gets hurt and finds out the truth about himself.  El Patrón loves Matteo very much, and lets him live, grow up, and act like a normal boy. However, the rest of the Alcrán family, El Patrón’s relatives, do not like Matteo, and would like to see him dead.  Matteo is surrounded with bodyguards, who teach him the secrets of life.

By the time he turns 14, Matteo feels very special, and does not consider himself a clone anymore.  He then takes a turn for the worse, by ordering  slaves around and rudely demanding things of people. But when El Patrón become very sick, he needs a donor to give him a heart, and Matteo is chosen. However, something very surprising and shocking happens, and Matteo escapes, his head and heart confused and full of both betrayal and loyalty. Matteo is caught and brought to a harvesting plantation for boy orphans, where all the orphans do is harvest plankton, seaweed, and shrimp. The boys are given nothing to eat except plankton, and are treated horribly, until Matteo again escapes with the help of three boys named Ton Ton, Chacho, and Fidelito. They all struggle through the desert, until they finally arrive at a town, only to be greeted by the bosses at the orphanage, who try to kill them.  The boys overpower the men, and discover a very surprising ending, which will rivet anybody who reads this book. Overall, I highly recommend The House of the Scorpion for any teen.

-Will R., 8th grade

Book Review: Double, by Jenny Valentine

double_coverThe mysterious pages of Double, by Jenny Valentine, will keep readers in suspense every twist and turn.

This mystery book is centered on a boy known as Chap, a sixteen-year-old runaway. After living on the streets for several years, one event changes his life forever. When police detain him for fighting, they discover an ad in the newspaper for a missing boy named Cassiel Roadnight. After realizing he has nothing to lose, Chap takes on a new identity with the caring family and home he never had.

Every minute is a challenge for him; Cassiel’s family could discover the truth at any moment. However, nobody realizes the truth, except for a friend of Cassiel’s named Floyd. Slowly, the two begin to piece together what really happened on the day Cassiel disappeared. Will Chap find out his true identity, and finally find a family of his own? This highly dramatic and thought-provoking story is sure to keep anyone at the edge of their seat.

Chap is a very intelligent and thoughtful person. His every motive is clear and simple, so readers can understand his every subtle or bold action. His emotions and thoughts really show through as he struggles to cope with his life spiraling out of control. As if building a house of cards, Chap is now forced to add layer after layer of deception, knowing that in the end it will all come tumbling down.

Valentine does a superb job with this murder mystery, skillfully meshing teenage emotions and the cold reality of the world. Double shows deep emotions about family and loved ones, and will have a profound impact on readers. Chap’s wit and quick thinking will aid him on his path to redemption as readers cheer him on. Double is a new, quick read that will definitely satisfy any reader’s crave for mystery.

-Phillip X., 7th grade