From Publishers Weekly
This science fiction adventure features four highly gifted but troubled teens brought to an experimental group home. Ages 10-up.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
From School Library Journal
Grade 6-9?This story is set in the near future at a facility for troubled youngsters in upstate New York. Two boys and two girls, ranging in age from 8-17, have been selected to take part in an experimental program. Living together as a family with two doctors as parental figures, the four highly intelligent young people are encouraged to learn from one another and reach out globally to other potential geniuses via the Internet. They soon recognize a shared concern about the increasing violence in the world and a compelling desire to halt it. Shared paranormal powers amplify the bond among the four and give new meaning to the "world wide web." When the director of the institution discovers the exciting new "paradigm shift" of the experiment, he plans to manipulate it to his own advantage, until he sees it as a liability and rapidly disbands the program. Years later, three of the four subjects have become functioning adults, still dreaming that psychic networking will save humankind. Tolan's skill with language, plus the dramatic tension between six sympathetic, if incomplete, characters and their nemesis make the novel readable. Its weaknesses, however, are greater than its strengths. The functional but unaesthetic format is a patchwork of journal entries, memos, e-mail, medical records, etc. A more serious problem is the shape-shifting focus. The ideas and issues raised are interesting and thought-provoking, but quickly dissolve into sentimentality.?Margaret Cole, Oceanside Library, NY
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.