The first part of the story was the part that grabbed my mind the most. Not just because it’s the first part I see in the book. It’s because about how the author made something, in the beginning, look so normal but ended up being so toxic. The thing he made so venomous was picking strawberries. Let me explain; on page 13, Angel, who's the youngest in the family, says she wants to go pick strawberries. When they finished breakfast, they all follow Angel’s request and go pick strawberries. What makes this harmful is when they’re walking, out of the blue, Angel starts to scream. Why is she hollering, you ask? Because there are half-wolf, half-human, blood-thirsty creatures called Erasers are flying towards them. Another reason I found the first part impressive was how the author made the scenes come to life. An example of this was when Max and the gang were getting stormed by the Erasers. I closed my eyes and I saw the Erasers, Max, and the gang, etc. I could picture me in every scene in the chapters.
The second part
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Max and the gang get new styles so the Erasers don’t identify them. They fly around until they find a spot on the beach that wasn’t so inhabited. They land so they can rest, sleep and camp out. Max and the gang have been running for their lives but they were still delighted by the new experience they get, especially playing in the ocean. Then, Fang drops the question to Max, “Do you want to just drop the mission on going to the institute?” Max and Fang have a not-long conversation about how they couldn’t drop the mission. Gasman and the rest panic about how Angel went underwater and hasn’t come up. They find her and are all super cheerful. Later in the book, in a subway tunnel, Max leads them to a door and they find themselves in a lab, just like the school. They hear voices and footsteps as Max tells the others to fly back through the subway tunnel and escape the