Thursday, November 12, 2015

Blog for Week 11/09/15- School's Out-Forever By James Patterson

     In the book School's Out-Forever by James Patterson, a big theme is family.  Family is a big theme in the book because it is supported by the conflict, the plot events, and the character's actions. This book is the second book in the sequel, Maximum Ride, which is also by James Patterson. In this book it just follows the lives of Max, Iggy, Fang, Gasman, Nudge, and Angel after they have discovered who they really are and who their parents are. All they ever knew in the world was just each other, so being together was really important. Especially when Erasers are chasing them around the country all the time, they are more powerful together than separate. The School is always sending out Erasers to capture them and bring them back. 
    
     Another reason why family is a big theme in this book is because of the plot events. When Iggy gets injured by an Eraser they need help from the outside world, so they take him to a hospital. Having 6 kids in the hospital by themselves is a little shady, the FBI shows up and decides to give the flock a home with an agent. They were originally suppose to leave Iggy in the hospital until he got better but everyone refused and stayed with him. They all knew what could have happened to him if he was alone the whole night, but stayed because there was no point in losing one of them. 

     The final reason why family is a big theme in this book is the character's actions. Max is the most who does most of the action in the book. When Max realizes that she is changing she tells Fang what is happening to her and gives him orders on what to do. She says "I took a deep breath. "If I turn into an Eraser," I said more strongly, "will you deal with it? To protect the others?"...If I turned into an Eraser, it would be his job to kill me." She told Fang because she knew he would understand and do what's right, no matter if it meant to kill Max. Max's actions aren't the only ones that support the theme of family, but she is the one that does more actions out of the rest of the flock, which indicate family.



5 comments:

  1. I agree that the main theme for Maximum Ride is family. When I read the book I was given a fresh image of family. Each person in the flock is different but together they certainly are a great family. There are points in the story where it's more obvious. I liked your details. Good work!

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  2. I really like how you supported your evidence based on the conflict, plot events, and the characters actions. Make sure to kind of elaborate more on some things, for example the erasers.

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  3. Your blog post is interesting. I liked that you provided evidence and that you explained how that evidence showed the theme. You did a good job on finding the theme, and explained well. Your summary was clear, too. Great job!

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  4. Nice Job Brimady! Your blog was very interesting, and very detailed!

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  5. Your example is a perfect example of familial trust. She trusted him to do the right thing even if it hurt him

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