Paperback ©2002 | -- |
At 17, Sam Pettigrew has an unusual responsibility: his baby son, Max. Sam and Max live with Sam's father. Sam attends a high school with on-site childcare and watches Max in his nonschool hours. Sam's taciturn father will support Sam and Max until Sam finishes high school. After that, Sam must work for a construction company owned by a family friend. Although Sam is a good student, the idea of college angers his father, who sees it as an abrogation of Sam's responsibility. When Sam meets old friend Claire, also a teen parent, he begins to emerge from the social exile he's felt since taking on Max, and he discovers a home situation more supportive than his own. Eventually, Sam makes some important decisions about the future, which anger Claire but allow others to move beyond the past. It's unusual to find a boy in the teen single-parent role, but this story is both realistic and perceptive, and the characters are fully realized, speaking and acting with authenticity and individuality. Bechard's epilogue lends insight into Sam's difficult decisions.
Horn BookSam, a single teenage father, stumbles through the fog of new parenthood, determined to take responsibility for his infant son, Max. Bechard effectively conveys Sam's perspective, neither sugarcoating his bond with Max nor using him as a "poster child for the dangers of teenage sex." A brief epilogue hints that everything works out for the best; still, it doesn't negate Sam's bravery when he ultimately decides to give Max up for adoption.
Kirkus ReviewsA high-school senior copes with the challenges of taking care of a baby while trying to get a diploma and maintain a social life. As she did in If It Doesn't Kill You (1999)—which was about an adolescent boy dealing with his father's homosexuality—Bechard again takes on a challenging issue: teenage parenthood. But in a nice change of pace, Bechard's protagonist is that unusual breed of kid, an unwed father with sole custody of his infant son. Told in the first person by a youngster who has powerful feelings he has trouble expressing, the narrative neatly lays out Sam's dilemma—how to be a good father without completely sacrificing his dreams for the future. While many young adults in his situation are truly caught between a rock and a hard place, some of the obstacles Sam faces feel manufactured, giving the reader the sense that they could be ameliorated if he would just open his mouth and ask for assistance. The protagonist, who lives at home with his equally inexpressive father, is nicely foiled by two classmates, both teenage mothers, who help round out the situation and demonstrate the various experiences of young parenthood. A disconcerting resolution mars the piece, negating much of the action that came before it and leaving the unprepared reader unsettled and dissatisfied. Even so, the author should be commended for taking on a tricky topic, the demands, delights, and difficulties of being young, single, and a dad. (Fiction. 12+)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)A 17-year-old unwed father struggles to juggle his responsibilities as a parent and student. "The teen's conflicted perceptions of his role as father, friend and son are intermittently droll and wrenching," wrote <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">PW. Ages 12-up. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(Dec.)
School Library JournalGr 8 Up-Sam Pettigrew has transferred from his old high school to an alternative school for a very good reason. When his girlfriend wants to give their baby up for adoption, the 17-year-old assumes the role of custodial single parent of his son, Max. The story begins with Sam in his new role as father and moves back and forth between his current troubles and his earlier ones: the death of his mother, his emotionally distant father, and his peer relationships. Sam's world is generally a supportive one, full of friends, teachers, and family. However, he and his father made a deal; if Sam graduates and then goes on to work a construction job, he'll support Sam and Max for one year. There will be no college in Sam's future, even with his great SAT scores. The young man has taken responsibility for himself and his actions. However, he is still an ordinary teenager trying his hardest to do the right thing, the best thing for the tiny, much-loved son that transformed his life and possibly his future. As Bechard deftly shows, the choices made in small ordinary moments are as important as the big "turning points" in determining the course of a life. In a world where much of YA literature is fraught with "noir" plots peopled with dysfunctional characters caught in tragic situations, Hanging on to Max is a breath of fresh air. Bechard has written a poignant winner of a book peopled with human beings all struggling to make their lives work. And she has created in Sam an unforgettable and realistic protagonist full of heart and guts.-Jane Halsall, McHenry Public Library District, IL Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
ALA Booklist (Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2002)
ALA/YALSA Best Book For Young Adults
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
ALA/YALSA Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
Wilson's High School Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
The total silence woke me up. I opened my eyes, slowly, and there they all were, watching me. Ms. Garcia, with her sad little worn-out smile. The rest of the class, grinning like monkeys. The room was almost dark, except for the light from the slide projector.
"Nice nap, Sam?" Ms. Garcia asked. Everyone burst out laughing. Ooh. Good one, Ms. Garcia. Except what teacher in her right mind would turn out the lights and show slides at 1:30 in the afternoon?
I shrugged upright in my desk. "Sorry." I shook my head, trying to clear it out.
"Do you know what this slide is, Sam?"
I squinted at the screen. "Jupiter?"
People applauded. Someone in the back whistled. I rubbed my eyes. When I'd fallen asleep, there'd been a slide of a woman making cookies. Ms. Garcia's "Why We Should Study Math" inspirational slide show.
"Okay," Ms. Garcia said, "in 1995 NASA sent a probe from the Galileo spacecraft down through the atmosphere of Jupiter." The slide projector clunked to a picture of the probe.
"It looks like a giant tit," some guy said.
Ms. Garcia sighed. "Okay. Well. The probe sent back a stream of data for 57.6 minutes, until the incredible pressure of the Jovian atmosphere crushed it."
"Poor little probe," the girl next to me said.
"Bor-ing," somebody in back said.
I imagined the probe, analyzing, computing, while the weight of Jupiter pressed in heavier and heavier.
"So," Ms. Garcia said, "do you think the scientists at NASA had to use math to design this probe? And to communicate with it?"
"I'd rather design a giant tit," the guy in back said.
Ms. Garcia sighed. The next slide was a Volvo. "Now back on Earth the safety engineers..."
I put my head back down on the desk and closed my eyes.
The bell woke me up. Kids were grabbing books and papers, cramming them into backpacks. Everybody talking at once. At the front of the room, Ms. Garcia was saying something about turning in the test papers from the beginning of class and something that was due next Wednesday. But nobody was listening. People were jamming up in the doorway, pushing to get out. "Test papers," Ms. Garcia said again.
The guy who sat behind me, who always smelled faintly of sweat and cigarette smoke, slapped my back. "Hey, dude. At least you weren't drooling."
"Right," I said. "Thanks." I stared down at my test. I'd finished it in the first ten minutes. And that had included checking my answers three times. I stood up slowly and shrugged into my backpack.
As I dropped the paper on her desk, Ms. Garcia's hand snaked out and grabbed my wrist. "Give me a couple of minutes, please, Sam?"
I glanced at the clock. "It's 2:30."
"They'll wait for you."
I sighed and moved out of the flow of kids. Good job, Sam. Two weeks into September and already you've ticked her off. Already you're blowing this. A kid stopped to explain why he'd done only the first three problems on the test. And then Marcella went into a long thing about how she was going to Mexico for two weeks and needed to know what she'd miss. I shuffled around a little, banged my foot against the garbage can, just to let them know I was still standing there, but nobody paid any attention.
Finally the last kid left. Ms. Garcia ran her fingers through her hair. Her face was tense, like maybe she had a bad headache.
"I've really gotta go, Ms. Garcia." I pointed to the clock. "And I'm sorry about falling asleep. It's just...we had a bad night last night. I didn't..."
She waved her hand. "I know. I know. Everybody had a bad night last night." She leaned toward me. "The real problem here, Sam, is you don't belong in this class."
I took a breath. "But this is the only math class that fits in my schedule. We went through this whole thing, Mrs. Harriman and me." Besides, I liked this class. I needed an easy class. I took another breath, deeper, slower. Don't panic here, Sam. Get a grip. "I need the credit. Ihaveto graduate this year."
Ms. Garcia tilted her head to one side and looked up at me. "I talked to Mr. Wright, Sam, yesterday. Your math teacher at Willamette View?"
I nodded. Mr. Wright. He'd been okay. Andy had called him "Mr. Wrong," which was pretty dumb, but I'd always laughed, because it was Andy.
"Mr. Wright loaned me a different text. It comes with a computer program. It'll let you work at your own speed."
I laughed. My own speed? My own speed was like a dead stop. "You know, Ms. Garcia, I sort of dropped out of Mr. Wright's class."
"But he says you had a good grasp of all the concepts. A very good grasp, he told me." She pointed to the iMac in the corner. "We can set you up over there. You can work on the computer in class and take the textbook home with you." She held it up, barely. It looked like it weighed about 500 pounds. "It actually gets into precalculus."
I could tell she wanted me to be impressed, excited. "But..." I started.
"And if you get stuck, I can help you out. I was a math major, you know." She smiled at me, her eyes big behind her wire-framed glasses. "I'm not saying it won't be hard work, Sam. But don't just say no. At least think about it." And her smile widened, a little desperate looking. Ms. Garcia, the math major, teaching bonehead math in an alternative high school. "I don't want to lose you, Sam. I think, if you were challenged more, you might sleep a little less."
And who needed sleep? I took another breath. If it would make her happy, if I could stay in her class, if I could graduate like I was supposed to, what was one more thing? "Sure," I said. "Sure. I can give it a try." I took the book. It did weigh 500 pounds.
She nodded, once. "Good. I'm glad, Sam. I don't think you'll regret this."
It took me five minutes to get to my locker. The halls were packed with kids, goofing around, laughing, yelling. Typical end-of-the-day high.
I jerked my locker open. It smelled funny. Gym socks? Rotting sandwich? I didn't have time to figure it out. I grabbed my English book and the stack of government worksheets. I stuffed them all into my backpack and slammed my locker shut.
The secretary looked up from her monitor as I burst through the day care doors. "We'd about given up on you," she said, but she was smiling. They all smiled at me, all the time.
"I had to talk to Ms. Garcia," I said. I shouldered through the door into the crawlers room.
"Here he is!" Mrs. McPherson, the teacher, said. "Here's Daddy."
Max leaned out of her arms toward me, his hands stretched out, his face red and swollen with crying.
I took him. "Hey, buddy. It's okay." He wrapped his arms around my neck, taking a big hiccuppy breath, twining his fingers into the long hairs at the back of my neck. I patted him gently. "Let's go home."
Copyright © 2002 by Margaret Bechard
Chapter Two
I was almost all the way home when I remembered we were out of diapers. So I had to double back all the way to the Safeway up on Barbur. Max had fallen asleep in his car seat, and it would have been a whole lot easier to just leave him, but I knew I couldn't do that.
He woke up as soon as I lifted him out. I held my breath, thinking maybe he was going to start screaming again. You never knew. But he just grinned up at me, and when I put him in the seat of the shopping cart, he made this goofy little squealy noise. Max got off on grocery stores.
I hated grocery stores. I hated the way people stared at us.
I went straight to the baby aisle and grabbed a giant pack of diapers. And some of the wipey things. We were probably out of those, too. I should have made a list. Dumb, Sam. I threw in a can of formula, just in case. I was keeping a running tally in my head. The Datsun needed gas, and I only had like twenty-five bucks left from the money Dad had given me on Sunday.
I headed out of the aisle and saw Martha Bennett's mother coming out of the produce section. I couldn't believe it. I'd picked this store because it was so far from home. I skidded the cart to a stop. Martha and I had played on the same indoor soccer team all through elementary school. I did not want to talk to her mother. I knew the look she'd give me. I knew just how she'd say, "Oh, Sam. Howareyou, Sam?"
I whipped into the next aisle, Max grabbing the bar in front of him and laughing. "Shh," I hissed. "Shh." We were in snack food. I grabbed a bag of Cheez Puffs and pretended to be reading the back, just in case she came down this aisle.
Cheez Puffs. I turned the bag over in my hands. Andy and I had lived on these things, weekends at his house. I used to spend just about every Friday night at Andy's, back in elementary and middle school.
Max leaned out of the cart, snagged a cardboard display of dip and nearly dragged it over.
I grabbed it just before all the little cans hit the floor. "Max!"
"Woo-woo!" he said. He grinned at me. I tossed the Cheez Puffs back on the shelf.
I peered around the end of the aisle. Mrs. Bennett was nowhere in sight, so I made a dash for the express line.
The checker smiled at Max. "Aren't you a sweetheart?" she said.
Max leaned over and blew a big spit bubble at her.
"Isn't he precious?" She reached over and tweaked Max's cheek. Then she looked up at me. "Is this your little brother?"
I nodded.
"And you're helping your mom out?"
I nodded again.
"Well." She gave Max another tweak, and he squealed. "Your mother must be very proud of both of you."
When we got home, I thought about sticking Max in his high chair, with a bottle and some crackers. Or maybe even sticking him in his crib. Just while I tried to get something done. I had about a million things to do. But playing with Max was one of the things I was supposed to do. It was on the list on the wall in my bedroom.
I took him into the living room and put him on the floor. I put Metallica on the CD player. A classic. The parenting book said music was good for a baby's mental development.
We played chase the baby around the living room, both of us crawling, Max shrieking and laughing. It was cool, to make him so crazy happy. We sat for a minute, beside the couch, both of us panting and grinning. "Ready to go again, buddy?" I asked.
He blinked at me, and he gave me a look, a look he had sometimes. Like he knew something I didn't know. And then, all of a sudden, he crawled under the coffee table, stretched out flat, and, in about ten seconds, fell fast asleep.
I sat there, watching him, making sure this was for real, making sure he wasn't just going to pop back up again. But he was out cold. "Yes!" I whispered. I clicked off the CD, lay down on the rug beside him, and I fell asleep, too.
Dad coming into the kitchen at 5:30 woke me up. My first thought was, Oh hell, where's Max? Nobody had ever specifically said it, but falling asleep like that was probably bad, too. Only he was still conked under the table.
Dad came into the doorway and looked at us.
"Hey," I said, quietly.
"I brought home Chinese food. Let's eat quick before he wakes up."
I scrambled to my feet. "Sounds great." And it did. It sounded wonderful. I hadn't had anything to eat since the gluey cafeteria macaroni at 11:30.
I filled my plate with lo mein and fried shrimp and kung pao chicken. Dad ate the way he always does -- one thing at a time. First the shrimp. Then the chicken. He even ate his rice separately, at the very end. When he was done, he set his fork down on his empty plate. "Has your Aunt Jean called?"
I was digging for the last of the noodles. "Not yet."
When it had seemed like maybe they wouldn't give me custody, because Mom was dead, and it was just Dad and me, Aunt Jean had stepped up. Had said she'd be here. And she had been. She'd moved in with us in December, and then stayed through January and February and March. It had been great. Max was so tiny, just a worm baby. I was totally clueless. Aunt Jean had known everything. How to change diapers, mix formula, get him to sleep. It had been kind of a shock when she'd said she thought I had the hang of it, and it was time for her to go back and look after Uncle Ted. A shock for both Dad and me.
"She'll call tonight," I said. "She always calls on Wednesdays." I dumped the leftover rice into the leftover kung pao and mixed it around in the box.
Dad nodded. He waited until I'd eaten the last grain of rice, then took the empty box from me. I slumped back in my chair. I knew I should get Max up. He'd never sleep tonight if he napped like this now. But I couldn't move.
Dad tossed all the boxes in the garbage. Then he filled a glass with water and drank it, standing by the sink.
"So," I said. "How was work?"
He put the glass down. "Okay."
I nodded. "Still wiring that building in Tualatin?"
"That's right. School okay?"
"Fine."
He nodded. He pointed with his chin toward the living room. "He's okay?"
"He's great."
Dad nodded again. Then he glanced up at the clock on the microwave. "I want to catch SportsCenter." He looked back at me. "Is there anything..." He looked around the kitchen, like there was something he might find. "Is there anything you need?"
I frowned. For a second, all I could think of were things I needed. But I gave him a big smile. "Nope," I said. "I've got it all under control."
He nodded. "Good then." And he went out of the kitchen. A few seconds later, I heard the TV in his bedroom click on.
I sat there, staring at the plates, shiny with grease and soy sauce. Something to add to the list: Never, ever make Max feel like he's disappointed you in some big unfixable forever way. And then, just a flash, I tried to imagine Max in seventeen years. Me and Max. I shook my head. I couldn't even imagine Max in seventeen minutes.
I hauled myself up out of the chair. I had to clean Max's bottles, get them ready for tomorrow. And wash the plates and forks Dad and I had just used. Do some laundry. Max was out of clean clothes again.
Homework. A ton and a half of homework.
I was rinsing the last bottle when the phone rang. "Hello?"
"Hey, Sam." There was silence, then, "It's me. Andy. Andy Pederson," he added.
"Andy? Andy! I...hey, man." I nearly said, I was just thinking about you today. I nearly told him about the Cheez Puffs. But that would sound stupid. "How's it going?"
"It's going...it's good, dude. Listen. I just wanted..." He paused, and I could picture him, sitting there, his feet jigging up and down. Andy was a high-energy kind of guy. "Listen. I made varsity, you know."
I didn't know. "No kidding! Way to go!"
"Yeah. Finally, huh? My senior year. Perfect timing."
We were both quiet. And I knew he was remembering all the times we'd talked about being seniors. Back when we were little pitiful freshmen. How great it would be to be seniors together. How maybe we'd even go to the same college. I could feel the memories, clogging the phone lines.
And suddenly I realized that, actually, I was a little ticked. Andy hadn't called me in like six months. He'd come over once, which had been sort of a disaster. Max had been sick. But he called me now, to tell me his great news. "Varsity," I said.
"The thing is, we're playing a home game? This Friday? And I thought you might...well...it should be a good game. And, I mean, you know, you can bring the baby."
In the living room, Max grunted. He was awake. Awake and filling his pants. "Hey, Andy. Dude. I'm glad you called."
"Do you think you can make it? To the game?"
"I'll think about it. This Friday." Max had stopped grunting and was starting to whimper.
"But, listen. Sam..."
I hung up before he could finish.
Copyright © 2002 by Margaret Bechard
Excerpted from Hanging on to Max by Margaret E. Bechard
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
It's Sam Pettigrew's last year of high school. And he's spending it figuring out how, at age seventeen, he is supposed to care for his baby son, Max.
Max wasn't part of the plan. He wasn't even part of the backup plan. But he's here now, and Sam is attending an alternative high school with other teen parents like himself. Talk about a wake-up call. But Sam is determined to make it work, to show everyone -- his dad, his new girlfriend, himself -- that he has what it takes to be a good dad.
Trading footballs for diaper bags and college brochures for feeding schedules, Sam gives fatherhood his best shot. Only no one told him it would be this hard. What if his best isn't good enough?