
Reach for this book when your teenager is grappling with feelings of powerlessness or a desire for justice in a world that feels increasingly unsafe or unfair. Following an accident where pieces of a smartphone are embedded in his brain, Tom gains the ability to interface with the global digital network. He uses these powers to seek retribution for a violent attack on his friend, Lucy. While the premise sounds like a superhero origin story, the tone is gritty, realistic, and deeply concerned with the ethics of vigilante justice. It is an ideal pick for older teens (14 and up) who prefer edgy, thought-provoking thrillers over traditional fantasy. It provides a bridge to discuss how technology impacts our empathy and the heavy weight of taking the law into one's own hands.
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Sign in to write a reviewFrequent use of strong profanity consistent with a gritty urban setting.
Deals with the trauma of sexual assault and the impact on the victim and her community.
The protagonist's methods of justice involve illegal hacking and physical harm.
The book deals with sexual assault (off-page but central to the plot), gang violence, and systemic poverty. The approach is starkly realistic and secular. The resolution is ambiguous: while Tom achieves a form of justice, it comes at a significant psychological and moral cost.
A 15-year-old boy who feels invisible or frustrated by social hierarchies. This reader likely enjoys gaming or tech but is looking for a story that acknowledges the darker, more complex realities of modern urban life.
Parents should be aware of the frank descriptions of gang culture and the aftermath of a sexual assault. The moral ambiguity of Tom's actions is the core of the book: it requires context regarding the difference between justice and revenge. A parent might see their teen becoming increasingly cynical about authority or expressing a desire to 'get back' at someone who has wronged them or a friend.
Younger teens (14) will focus on the 'cool' factor of the tech-powers and the revenge plot. Older teens (17+) will likely engage more with the philosophical questions about whether Tom is still human and the ethics of his surveillance.
Unlike many YA superhero stories, this is a 'low-fantasy' thriller. It treats the transformation as a medical anomaly and a burden rather than a gift, set against a backdrop of raw, contemporary realism.
After Tom is struck by a falling smartphone, fragments of the device lodge in his brain, granting him 'iBoy' powers: the ability to intercept calls, hack databases, and visualize the digital world. He uses these abilities to hunt down the gang members who assaulted his friend Lucy and terrorize his London housing estate.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.