While trying to get back at the girl who has stolen her boyfriend, sixteen-year-old Annie and her stepbrother Nick accidentally send threatening email messages to a stranger and find themselves targets for a murderer
Last night I read this delightful third entry in the nine-volume DANGER.COM series of tech-based teen thrillers. While the vintage computing content is disappointingly low (outside of some mentions of e-mail directories, instant messaging, and CD-ROM encyclopedias), the book still manages to charm with its endlessly snarky narration, stepsibling relationship-building, and pizza-centric murder mystery. Beware the death cap mushroom, kids, and never send a threatening message to pepr.oni@murder.net!!!
I didn’t like the incestuous feelings I got between Annie and Nick. Did you read constantly expecting these two to hook up or was it just me? I guess I just didn’t find the male love interest that intriguing, and with my constant fear that there’d be step-siblings falling in love, I just couldn’t get behind Annie’s need to get Josh back. This is an example of how the internet can easily be used to bully and I don’t love that. That Annie and Nick don’t feel any remorse for what they do to Pepper doesn’t sit right. The mystery part of the story feels more silly too than the previous two books in this series I’ve read and.. I won’t go so far as to say Annie and Nick deserve the trouble they went through to solve their mystery, but they weren’t the most likable.
wow this story is amazing. to see the thrills and betrayal. who knew that step brother sis would get along so well to plot something so crazy, even if it means getting back at an ex and an enemy but what tuns out to be a threat note to the wrong person.
This book is o.k. i read it after I had read all the ohter danger.com books and it kind of got boring. i mean it was well written but you know what is going to happen, so it's not that fun.