ALA Booklist
(Thu Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)
Welcome to the Society for Web-Operated Aerial Robotic Missions (SWARM for short), an online message board for four drone-enthusiast teens throughout the U.S. This STEM-positive adventure is broken into four stories, each featuring one member of the club. In Indiana, Zora uses her drone to locate a classmate's missing younger brother, who is lost in an encroaching forest fire. Howard faces off against a drone-wielding paparazzo stalking his Hollywood crush in California. Parker utilizes her drone and hacking skills to take on local bank robbers in New York, failing to realize that they have the same level of skill to track her down, too. Lastly, SWARM founder Sai faces a mysterious opponent operating a copycat of Sai's own drone and wreaking havoc in Sai's hometown. While some suspension of disbelief is required (where do the teens get the money to pay for these high-tech drones?), the action is swift, the characters diverse and fleshed out, and the short-story structure will appeal to tech-savvy reluctant readers.
Kirkus Reviews
Online friends brought together by their drone hobby help others with their skills.The multicultural crew are introduced in a frontmatter dramatis personae: African-American girly-girl ace pilot Zora Michaels, Vietnamese-American genius Howard To, white tough-girl hacker Parker Reading, and Indian-American aesthete Sai Patel. They are all members of a private message board and call themselves the Society for Web-Operated Aerial Robotic Missions, or Drone Academy. The friends support one another (and their customized-to-suit drones), and they participate in missions to do good works with the drones. The book is divided into four straightforward sections telling each character's story in turn. Zora uses her drone to look for a young runaway facing a forest fire (and also reconciles her popularity with her internal nerd); Howard takes on a paparazzi drone spying on his favorite actress; Parker faces off against some high-tech jewel thieves; and Sai finds his drone design copied by a mysterious, troublemaking imposter looking to frame him for misdeeds. The high-tech, fast-paced action builds to ever greater threats with each story. Aside from Parker, the kids are generally law-abiding, and instead of vigilantism they turn things over to authorities; all model supportive friendships. Aside from a heavily-hinted-at intragroup crush, there's no romance. Sai's storyline, which includes bullying and victims of bullying, carries the biggest emotional punch and ends the book on an ambiguous note, reflecting Sai's complexity.A welcome geeky addition, especially for reluctant readers. (Science fiction. 9-14)