Introducing 

Prezi AI.

Your new presentation assistant.

Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.

Loading…
Transcript

The antagonists are the Erasers and Ari.

Antagonists

Characters

The Flock-Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, the Gasman, and Angel are the Flock. Six kids who are 98 percent human and 2 percent bird.

Erasers-They are wolflike creatures that are half-human, half-wolf and predators to the Flock.

Jeb Batchelder- He is the father of Max and Ari. He saved the Flock from the School a couple years ago.

Ari-He is the son of Jeb and half-brother of Max. He is also an Eraser.

This picture represents the Flock and how their always running away from the Erasers.

The book is told by Max. Max’s tones in the book are informal, ironic, and adventurous.

Tone

Protagonist

The protagonists are Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, the Gasman, and Angel.

Kewanee` Harris

Ms. Anastasio

Language Arts, 7H

12-20-12

Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment

By: James Patterson

I gave this book a rating of five. I gave this book a rating of five because it keeps you on the edge of your seat. It makes you never want to put the book down and keep wondering what’s going to happen next.

Rating

Synopsis

The setting of the book was in New York and California.

While picking strawberries, the Erasers show up. The Flock tries to fight back but the Erasers are just too powerful. The Erasers knock out the Flock. When the Flock wakes up Angel is gone. So, this leads Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, and the Gasman on a mission to find her. After finding Angel at the School in California, they set out for two more missions. They went to New York looking for The Institute for Higher Living so they could gather information on their parents. While they were in New York they also searched for the best homemade cookies.

Setting

Conflict

There are three conflicts in Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment. The first conflict is Max verses her Voice. Max has a Voice in her head and it helps her find Angel and The Institute for Higher Living. Max’s Voice is helpful but it is also annoying. The next conflict is Max verses the Erasers and Ari. Throughout the book Max is always fighting the Erasers and Ari, and trying to keep her Flock out of danger. The last conflict is Max verses the World. Max is fighting so much that it feels like the World is against her and she starts to feel that she can’t trust her own Flock.

The book is told by Max. Max’s tone in the book are informal, ironic, and adventurous.

Tone

Expository: The Flock are

picking strawberries.

Rising Action: The Erasers take Angel. Then, the Flock finds her at the School in California and fly to New York.

Plot

Climax: The Flock are in New York looking for The Institute for Higher Living to get information about their parents. They find The Institute for Higher Living and get the information.

In the book, Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment, Max says, “We’ve got to get her back,” when the Erasers take Angel. page 19

Quote

Falling Action: While leaving The Institute for Higher Living Ari and Max get into a fight and Max breaks Ari’s neck. When she’s leaving Jeb says, “You killed your own brother!”.

Resolution: The Flock head out for Washington D. C..

Learn more about creating dynamic, engaging presentations with Prezi