![]() ![]() There’s also the matter of how he disappeared never being explained. After leaving the School, Jeb took the kids (who call themselves the flock) to a house up in the mountains… where somehow they managed to survive in isolation for two years, continuing to build up a fascinatingly impeccable range of “pop” culture references. This immediately presents a set of problems. ![]() Then, two years before the book starts, he disappeared. It follows a group of six kids (the titular Maximum (Max) Ride, Fang, Iggy, the Gasman, Nudge, and Angel) genetically modified to be able to fly via wings, who grew up in cages and were experimented on and tormented by the scientists of a mysterious facility called “the School.” Four years prior to the book’s events, however, one of the scientists (Jeb Batchelder) helped the kids escape from the School. Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment (which I’ve been and will from now on refer to as just Maximum Ride), written by James Patterson, is not a very good book. (Starting with this review, I’ll be dropping the star system and replacing it with a “verdict,” in which I give a quick line or two about my overall thoughts on a book.) ![]()
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