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Saving Max
Saving Max
Author: Antoinette van Heugten
Danielle Parkman's sweet but mentally troubled adolescent son, Max, while being assessed at an Iowa psychiatric hospital, is found covered with blood at the scene of a murder and is accused of being the killer. Danielle, out on bail but confined to her motel as an accessory, defies a court order despite herself being a lawyer. Desperate to s...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780778312932
ISBN-10: 0778312933
Publication Date: 10/10/2010
Pages: 376
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 39

3.7 stars, based on 39 ratings
Publisher: Mira
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

kattkatt99 avatar reviewed Saving Max on + 119 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Product Description ***Found on line***
Max Parkmanautistic and whip-smart, emotionally fragile and aggressiveis perfect in his mother's eyes. Until he's accused of murder. Attorney Danielle Parkman knows her teenage son Max's behavior has been getting worseusing drugs and lashing out. But she can't accept the diagnosis she receives at a top-notch adolescent psychiatric facility that her son is deeply disturbed. Dangerous. Until she finds Max, unconscious and bloodied, beside a patient who has been brutally stabbed to death. Trapped in a world of doubt and fear, barred from contacting Max, Danielle clings to the belief that her son is innocent. But has she, too, lost touch with reality? Is her son really a killer? With the justice system bearing down on them, Danielle steels herself to discover the truth, no matter what it is. She'll do whatever it takes to find the killer and to save her son from being destroyed by a system that's all too eager to convict him.
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NOW...I am not saying that boosting your vocabulary is a bad thing by any means but PLEASE... It seemed like the author was over using her great vocabulary simply for ego's sake. Common words could and should have been used in several places.
I mean come on...tenebrous, nebulous, kilim, expiation and malefic just in the first 20 pages and that's leaving out all the psychiatric terms.Then there was masticating instead of chewing.People do not talk like that.
That aside; having several children of my own I can definitely go to that place of being willing to do anything to save your child. Yet there were times(lots of them) that I could have shook Max's mother because it "seemed" as though she didn't have the common sense God gave a door knob.
Am I ever glad I got past the at times ridiculous use of words and Danielle's what appeared to be a lack of common sense, to finish the book because it turns out to rank a solid 4.
I realize that deducting a whole point for an extreme use of 50 cent words may seem excessive but most of us read books like this to relax or escape and don't want to have to grab our Websters to find the meaning of unnecessary and extreme words.
I am looking forward to her next book.
CherryDuck avatar reviewed Saving Max on + 150 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This was a really easy book to get hooked on. Within the first chapter I found myself finding it hard to put this book down. I love books that make you bargain with yourself on how many more pages you will allow yourself to read before you get back to the real world, and this was one of those books. I also found myself breaking all those bargains to read just one more chapter.

The author gives you a glimpse into the life of a single mother of a special needs child. The struggles she faces with a demanding career and a son who needs a whole lot of her time and attention. This is not just a thriller, or a murder mystery, but a story about family. The author tells a tale that both horrifies and humbles. The story is filled with characters that range from the deeply disturbed to the completely devoted.

This book would have easily been a 5 star book, had it not been for Danielles detective disasters. I found myself getting so mad at how much she got away with in the courtroom and with all her illegally obtained evidence, that it was raising my blood pressure to dangerous levels. I realize that this is a work of fiction, but it got pretty unbelievable at the end at times. Had the author stayed more true to life in that regard, this book would have been practically perfect. As it is, Perry Mason-esque courtroom scenes aside, it was pretty damn good.

Cherise Everhard, October 2010
punkeymonkey529 avatar reviewed Saving Max on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I really liked this book. It felt real, and kept me on the edge of my seat at so many times.
Max Parkman is an autistic boy a high functioning autistic boy. After a downward spiral Danielle, Max's mother brings him to the best mental facility in the country to try and sold the issue for his outburst and suicidal tendencies.
While at the hospital some things start not going so smoothly. Danielle steps in to sold what's going on. The hospital refuses to release information on how they are treating Max. After some investigation she decides to take Max out of the facility. They wont allow it. Shortly afterwards a murder occurs with another client at the facility, Max is left to blame, convinced her son is innocent she goes on a search jumping through hoops of all sorts to prove his innocence.
I don't want to spoil anything, but I will say the ending left me shocked. I did start to guess something along the lines of who committed the murder,but like how it ended. I don't think this will spoil anything, but I can't wait for a sequel.
reviewed Saving Max on + 14 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this one! Could hardly put it down. It is a legal/medical thriller. If you are a John Grisham fan, I definitely recommend this one.
It also has a phycological thriller story line....
I loved it
reviewed Saving Max on
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book, didn't want to put it down! Although from a medical and physcologial standpoint some things in this book aren't possible, it is still a great read. Enthralling, captivating and keeps you on the edge of your proverbial seat. The overuse of 'big words' is a little irritating but otherwise I highly recommend this book.
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reviewed Saving Max on
The author has an amazing way of portraying the human spirit. This one you surely won't put down until it's finish. I look forward to further works from van Heugten.
reviewed Saving Max on + 3161 more book reviews
Well written, very intense and terrifying--concerning child abuse (not sexual) and what takes place in a mental instituation.
reviewed Saving Max on + 24 more book reviews
It was hard to put down. It's a must read in my opinion.
reviewed Saving Max on
This story was too predictable. I read about half of it, then put it down.
buzzby avatar reviewed Saving Max on + 6062 more book reviews
Unsatisfying conclusion
babyjulie avatar reviewed Saving Max on + 336 more book reviews
(taken from my goodreads.com account)

I don't think I've ever been able to say this about a book before but I can actually agree with much of what is said in numerous positive and negative reviews here on GR about Saving Max.
If I was going to point anyone toward this it would be Picoult readers. But I'd also give them fair warning - this isn't as good as Picoult's books. It's on the way and it's very apparent that van Heugten has talent for sure. But she's not there yet IMO.
A few of the problems with the story were the timeline towards the end, in the last quarter or so. There's a real stressful time period where things need to happen and miraculously Danielle always manages to do everything in time. Even when that means boarding a plane, flying to a different state, leaving the airport and getting to someones home - all while her companion uses the restroom back in the first airport. It didn't fit because said companion wouldn't have waited hours before calling Danielle. This type of scenario played out a few times, in differing ways of course.
I also felt interrupted in the story when Danielle managed to do things that just can't be conceivably done in this day and age. No normal Mother (a non-criminal, non-hacking Mother that is, which is supposed to be Danielle) can just decide to break into the country's top psychiatric hospital and also do so successfully. It's just not plausible. And she does it with ease. She gets in, she gets past nurses and guards, she gets past cameras, it's all too much. That really did a number on me personally.
I also feel like it was a tad too long. My trade paperback copy is 376 pages and off the top of my head I'd say the story could have been pared down some 76 or so pages.
Some of the positives about the book are the ending, the characters, and Max himself. Max is a pretty strong semi-main character IMO even though at times he's the weakest link in the chain. The ending is hard. It's not the happiest ending in the world. I expected, even though I don't normally like when this happens, everything to be nice and tied up by the end. It's not. Well, some is, but there's at least one pretty big aspect of the story left wide open. I know a lot of people don't like this. I happen to enjoy that sometimes and this is one of those times. It just makes it all the more realistic to me since life isn't all happy-go-lucky by the end of the song. As angry as it makes me that so-and-so didn't get caught in this book or that such-and-such didn't happen in that book, I still prefer this manner of ending over a happy ending much of the time.
I didn't realize Saving Max was going to revolve around Munchausen's'. That surprised me somewhat but the author did a good job tying it in and still making the reader feel like they knew right where it was going.
I definitely think that with time and practice van Heugten will climb up the ladder of success. No one can know if she'll get to Picoult's level (she's standing a foot above the top rung IMO) but anythings possible.


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