Themes
Trust- In this book, you are not sure who you can trust. It seems like the person who you can trust, like Dr. Willner, ends up to be untrustworthy. When the kids get sent to "rehabilitation" camps, the parents should trust their kids and believe that they did nothing wrong. Instead, they are trusting Dr. Willner after he has brainwashed them with all the emails and they believe that their kids did something wrong.
Power- When one person has all the power, like Dr. Willner, it can cause horrible results. Instead of having an equal amount of power, you leave it all up to this man. He starts to do whatever he wants to do from putting in metal detectors to sending kid to "rehabilitation" camps for misbehaving.
Friendship- Tom is a very good friend in this story. He likes his friends, Brian, Silas, and Avery, a whole lot. He was a really nice friend and when Silas and Avery go missing, Tom really starts to worry about them. He realized that his friends were in danger and he cared about them so much throughout the course of the book.
Power- When one person has all the power, like Dr. Willner, it can cause horrible results. Instead of having an equal amount of power, you leave it all up to this man. He starts to do whatever he wants to do from putting in metal detectors to sending kid to "rehabilitation" camps for misbehaving.
Friendship- Tom is a very good friend in this story. He likes his friends, Brian, Silas, and Avery, a whole lot. He was a really nice friend and when Silas and Avery go missing, Tom really starts to worry about them. He realized that his friends were in danger and he cared about them so much throughout the course of the book.