Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Salvar a Max

Rate this book
¿Qué harías si acusaran a tu hijo de asesinato? Max Parkman es un niño autista, de inteligencia brillante, emocionalmente frágil y agresivo, pero perfecto a ojos de su madre. Hasta que lo acusan de asesinato. La abogada Danielle Parkman sabe que el comportamiento de su hijo adolescente, Max, ha estado empeorando últimamente. Ha tomado drogas y se ha vuelto violento. Sin embargo, no puede aceptar el diagnóstico que le dan en una importante clínica psiquiátrica del país: que su hijo tiene una grave enfermedad mental y que es peligroso. Hasta que encuentra a Max inconsciente y ensangrentado junto a la cama de otro paciente que ha sido brutalmente asesinado. Danielle se ve atrapada en un mundo de dudas y de miedo. Las autoridades le impiden ver a Max y comunicarse con él, pero ella se aferra a la certeza de que su hijo es inocente. Sin embargo, ¿puede ser que ella también haya perdido el contacto con la realidad? ¿Es su hijo, realmente, un asesino? El sistema legal los está cercando, pero Danielle saca fuerzas de flaqueza y comienza a investigar para descubrir la verdad, sea cual sea. Hará lo que sea necesario para encontrar al asesino y salvar a su hijo de una justicia que está demasiado ansiosa por condenarlo.

336 pages, Paperback

First published September 28, 2010

288 people are currently reading
15280 people want to read

About the author

Antoinette van Heugten

6 books131 followers
A former international trial lawyer, van Heugten spent 15 years practicing all over the world, primarily in Scandinavia, Germany and the Netherlands, as well as in Houston, her hometown. She’s a graduate of the University of Texas in Austin, Texas, where she earned her undergraduate and law degrees.

The Tulip Eaters is van Heugten’s second novel. Her debut novel, Saving Max (MIRA Books, October 2010), was a USA Today bestseller, translated into six languages and received much critical acclaim. Inspired by her real-life experience as the mother of two autistic children, Saving Max follows a single mother whose teenage son has Asperger’s syndrome and becomes the primary suspect in a gruesome murder case.

In her latest book, The Tulip Eaters (MIRA Books, November 2013), van Heugten follows Nora de Jong as she returns home from work to find her mother brutally murdered and infant daughter missing. The only clue is the body of a dead stranger, clutching a Luger in his hand. Launching a frantic search for her missing daughter, de Jong is forced to confront the roots of her family’s secret past in World War II, leading her to Amsterdam, where her own haunting memories flood back.

When not thinking up new ways to kill off her characters, van Heugten enjoys long hikes with her dog, gardening and traveling. She is currently working on her next novel, Finding Marianne, the sequel to Saving Max. She lives in Fredericksburg, Texas, with her husband, a former prominent oil and gas trial lawyer.

For more information, please visit www.avhbooks.com.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
3,514 (29%)
4 stars
4,222 (35%)
3 stars
2,843 (24%)
2 stars
861 (7%)
1 star
323 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,181 reviews
23 reviews
May 16, 2011
I will not even give this book one star as it is one of the worst books Ive ever read. The storyline is very similar in many ways to Jodi Picoults latest book. The writing is amateurish, boring, and worse than the simplistic Danielle Steele type books I use to read when I was a teen.In fact the one love scene I read before I quit reminded me of those romance novels. The most annoying and I think dangerous thing about books like this, even though they are fiction, is the false impressions they give about psychiatry. I work in the field of child psychiatry and am the first person to say it has lots of problems...I am far from its biggest defender. But this book is complete trash and is not even close to the truth about the field. I just hope no one that reads this book is afraid to seek care for themselves or their child because of things like this. I will say the storyline has potential and the characters could have been interesting but I couldnt get beyond the lies to finish the book. Dont waste your time.
Profile Image for JoAnn/QuAppelle Kirk.
389 reviews30 followers
December 7, 2010
I finished this in about 2 days, so I guess you would say that it engaged me,,,,but it was not as good as I had hoped. Interesting premise, but....poor execution. Character development was not well done at all.

I had several other problems with the book. I think it is overwritten (some of the writing is so dramatic and lots of unnecessary similes) and somewhat repetitive. The shift from past to present tense is awkward and unnecessary. Anyone looking for a novel about autism will be disappointed because that is a very small part of it. Many of the incidents in the "asylum" are just silly/implausible and would never happen in today's medical world of high security and privacy.

I also felt that in order to have any feelings about Max, the author should have told us more about him before he was whisked off to Iowa. I have little understanding of what he was like "before", which made his mother's denial - of what he apparently did - seem unlikely. And Danielle, Max's mother, was not a very likable character - as a lawyer she was pretty flippant about breaking the law and seemed really pushy to me.

The search for the evidence in the murder was about all that kept me reading, but parts of that search were very contrived and too coincidental.

Overall, I would say that this book was "just okay".
Profile Image for Lissa.
171 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2011
OMG! I honestly dont know where to start. This novel captivated me right from the beginning. The second I started it, I couldnt put it down. IT WAS SO GOOD. I finished it the same day. I was up until 5:40 in the morning, and listening to my tunes.

I was so moved by Danielle and Max. I would picture it, and it was just unreal. I hated Jonas's mother since the beginning. I knew something was up with her. I just can't beleive someone would go to that extent. Mariannes journals were absolutly horrendous. I remember putting my hand to my mouth so many times. I even cried at the ending. I was so happy that the charges against Max, Danielle and Tony got dropped. I can't imagine what they went through.

The only thing that disappointed me with the novel, was the ending. I thought that the author should have added more after Mariannes disappearance. I really hope that she writes a sequel.

But all in all Antoinette van Heugten has my 2 thumbs up. I really look forward to her future works.This is a highly recommended novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Arielle.
260 reviews14 followers
September 17, 2013
This book was recommended to me by a friend. She spoke so highly of it, and all the emotions she felt while she read it. She is the only reason I stuck it out to the end.

This book was horrible! I don't even know where to start! The writing was very elementary. It reminded me of when I was in the seventh grade, and a few friends of mine and I tried our hand at writing stories with adult characters. It was what we perceived adults to be--not what they truly were. That is how this book is. The author did little to no research about law, psychosis, and several other elements in the book.

The writing was rudimentary at best. Repetitive usage of the same adjectives and hyperbole. If I never hear the phrase "her words are bullets." as a stand alone sentence describing how angry a person is in my life again, it will be too soon. "Her eyes are steel." Etc. Try being more descriptive?

The tense in which she decided to write did not flow with her style of writing. It was awkward, but my biggest complaint is that she spent absolutely no time developing a foundation for a relationship between the characters. She has a best friend that is unbelievable and forced as a best friend. She has a son with whom she loves dearly, but the reader is only the told this, and never quite feels or believes it. She has a lover who goes from one night stand to love of her life in the span on 24 hours. It can happen, but van Heugten did not make me believe it. Some of the characters were distractions or unnecessarily rude without any sense of what drives them or complexity. Some of the character background (Georgia and her family) was pointless and distracting.

The big thing is--NOBODY acts like any of these characters did! The court system does not work that way. Law enforcement does not work that way. Judges don't, lawyers don't, nurses and doctors don't. It takes a suspension of reality to just go with it, but I have to admit that I spent most of my time rolling my eyes and shaking my leg in restlessness.

Even with the unbelievability of it all, the courtroom scenes are the best--even though they are entirely too drawn out. Danielle is a good lawyer (so we are told over and over, but only glimpse it here). The ending is suspenseful, and actually quite good--but that does not save this book from being a bad read.

All in all, if you could read only the diagnoses scene and the very end, you would not have missed much. This book is 90% bad, 7% ok, and 3% good.
Profile Image for Wanda.
253 reviews57 followers
May 13, 2013
Okay now I need to write a review about this book even though I decided not to finish reading it. Danielle has a high function autistic son who has asperger's. Now autism is a disorder that is not contagious and it affects 1 out of 110 children born today. I have a handsome 9 year old with autism he has PDD (Pervasive Developmental Disorder). Like Danielle's son my son is extremely high functioning as well.
Danielle explains how her son was a sweet boy. How he was lovable and sweet. She explained how close they were, before he reaches his teenage years where things change from bad to worst. All this reminds me of my own son, except the bad to worst part because my son is still young.
Now the fact that this book is about a mom and her autistic son is what captivated me to this book. So Danielle's son has taken a downward turn with his autism. He started using drugs and becoming violent, suicidal, etc. So she decided to take him to a country known clinic to have him tested and try to find help and managing his outbursts. But one situation started happening after another. And she finds herself thinking what's going on with her son. He was acting out in ways she never seen before. So she became suspicious of the staff and found herself questioning the staff and the treatment they using with her son. Refusing to believe their prognosis about her son, she started to investigate and realized they didn't tell her everything they were doing with him. So when she decides to take him out of the hospital and get a second opinion, they won't let her take him.
Now that's where I stopped reading. It's my own denial. I pray that I never have to go through what the character in this book went through. And since the author wrote her story so vividly, I started going through my own denial about her case and praying that it never happens to me.
So this is a good book if you consider yourself strong enough to read and accept facts that she has written in this book. Now I'm not saying I'm not strong but I'm not strong enough to read what my future may hold for us
Profile Image for Sue.
89 reviews1 follower
August 25, 2011
Reading other reviews, people seem to either love or hate this book. I am one of the ones who loved it! It's a quick read because I just couldn't put it down. Now there are a few bits that are rough around the edges, but in the main it's an unusual psychological thriller. Danielle is a single parent to Max, who has Asperger's Syndrome. At sixteen he is getting worse, and she checks him into a renowned psychiatric unit for short term assessment. However, within a few days he is accused of the brutal, and bloody murder of a young fellow patient.

Saving Max brings up all sorts of issues, and would make a great book group book for discussion. How far do you go to protect your child? Can you hand on heart say "My child didn't do this" when your child is mentally sick and in a psychotic break? Can you trust an institution just because the medical staff seem so well qualified? Can you trust the justice system to get to the truth when judicial rulings can seem so random? Can other people present a mask to you that is so good that you never can see the reality beneath? And just how far would you go against the system before you caved in?

My tiny negatives are nothing against the pluses in this book. Why call the Head Nurse by the name of Kreng. "Nurse Kreng" just smacks of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest". And why did we have a random character such as Naomi? I felt that she was put in just to muddy the waters. Also there were a couple of occasions when I felt that the author had Danielle do something that I felt was unbelievable. It seemed as if she couldn't think of any other way to move the plot along with the next bit of information.

Having said that, I thoroughly enjoyed the book. It was fast paced and interesting, and I look forward to reading the next book by this author.
131 reviews2 followers
May 1, 2012


When I first got into this book, I thought I was going to end up with a three-halfer or four star. The story captured my attention from the very beginning. A single mom is raising a special needs child who is autistic with other non specified mental health issues. The mom makes a fateful decision to take her son to a special psychiatric hospital for treatment. But treatment doesn't help and the son is accused of murdering another patient. The mom, a lawyer herself, faces criminal charges of her own related to the murder and must fight to clear her name and her son's. Great plot for a murder mystery...or so you would think. However, the story loses all credibility because of several factual impossibilities and improbabilities. For instance, this is written by an attorney....who shame on her....should know better: minors, even if tried as adults are constitutionally prohibited from receiving the death penalty; plea agreements in criminal cases can not be confidential; and a defense attorney will not represent co-defendants. There were many more of these inaccuracies the author tried to slip in. They did nothing for the story except make it laughable...not in a good way. Aside from the inaccuracies,the author creates a ludicrous love interest. Why ludicrous? Well, the love develops immediately upon the consummation of a one-night-stand where, by the why, the female lies about her identity and everything else. So really, how can love develop under those circumstances??? My advice...don't waste you time reading this!l
Profile Image for fleurette.
1,534 reviews160 followers
June 8, 2020
I have very mixed feelings about this book. On the one hand, I read it very quickly and easily. I really couldn't pull myself away from it once I started it. On the other hand, there are many things that usually annoy me in my books and this one was no exception.

It's always easier for me to say what I don't like than what I like. Therefore, let's start with good things. Although the beginning is rather slow and not much happens, you read this story really fast. The chapters are short, there are no long descriptions, and even the first ten chapters, though introductory, are not very boring.

The plot is also remarkably interesting. It is a combination of a legal and psychological thriller. Of course, many things can be predicted from the very beginning but still some elements surprised me. All the time I wanted to know what would happen next.

Now let's get to what I had a problem with. Danielle very often behaves really stupidly. First of all, she lies to her lawyer. At some point, she justifies it by not wanting to go to jail for these acts. But who would report her to the police? Her own lawyer and the detective they hired?! There is such a thing as a legal professional privilege! Danielle as an excellent lawyer herself should know this and be honest with her own lawyer. Hiding things from him, hoping he won't find out, doesn't help her case.

Danielle also does a lot of other annoying things. Breaking parole rules comes a little too easily to her. She runs away from her lawyer and detective who are there to help her. Without a second thought, she goes headfirst into dangerous situations. For such an intelligent woman, she does really stupid things. And you can't justify all that with the fact that she is desperate.

There are also at least two moments when her personality is inconsistent. That is, when she finds out about her son's diagnosis and during a meeting with doctors to discuss it. I was convinced that it would turn out that she was given some medicine without her knowing about it. But it turns out that it was her own reaction. Her behaviour at these moments does not match her character.

And finally, we have this bizarre romance. This is completely unreliable. I mean, I don't mind Danielle and Tony meet in such circumstances and are interested in each other. But love?! They know each other for a few days, during which they mainly work to get her and her son out of prison. And then she disappears for a few days. When was this feeling supposed to develop between them?! This is really one of the weak points of this book, straight from the category romance.

Despite some issues I mentioned above, I really like this book. I would definitely recommend it.
Profile Image for Nikki in Niagara.
4,322 reviews160 followers
July 15, 2010
Reason for Reading: One of the book's main characters is described as having Asperger's and since I, myself have Asperger's I was immediately interested. But the book's plot and setting of a psychiatric hospital also had me eager to read the book.

The book opens with Danielle, the mother of Max, entering a patient's room and finding him brutally murdered while huddled on the floor nearby, unconscious, is her son, Max, with the murder weapon in his hand. Danielle is a lawyer and her son, Max, has Asperger's. Max is about 16 and has become very moody and suddenly started to show violent tendencies. His doctor recommends that it is time Max go to a psychiatric hospital for a full evaluation. When he enters, Danielle is advised to go home but she is determined to stay until he is ready to come home but the doctor will only allow her short visits in the morning and afternoon. Max's behaviour reportedly deteriorates and he becomes extremely violent, has to be sedated and restrained. After the murder occurs Max is arrested as is Danielle as an accessory. Danielle does everything in her power to prove her son's innocence and this takes her along two very different paths, both with a deviant and horrifying end.

This was a fantastic mystery! A page-turner book that I couldn't put down until I'd finished it. The supposed Asperger's theme is not very prevalent. At the beginning we meet a teenage boy with AS and learn some small details of the condition but the story soon morphs into a whole different set of circumstances where the Asperger's can no longer be recognized. At the end, it is addressed again and Max's original problem is dealt with nicely. But this is not a book to read to find out about Asperger's. It simply contains a character who has AS in the same way one would read a book where a character was blind but one would not read it to find out all about blindness.

The story is superb. I love reading books that take place is psychiatric institutions; it is such a private, secluded world that the potential for evil to be taking place with in its walls is perfectly plausible in one's imagination, and of course with the deplorable history of asylums and loony bins not *that* far away in the past it doesn't take a great leap of imagination.

Max is a wonderful character and though he is hard to get to know for most of the book because he's often sedated there does come a time when his true person comes through. It is at this point that some of the benefits of his Asperger's personality come into play (his intelligence and obsessiveness)and he helps vitally with his case. The mystery leaves a wonderful trail of suspense as it unravels. I admit I figured out whodunit quite early and why but the details were still disturbing as they were unearthed.

A totally engrossing psychological suspense. The author's website states that she is working on another book that will once again feature a character with a psychiatric disorder and I am most emphatically looking forward to its release.

back-to-books.blogspot.com
Profile Image for Bethany.
173 reviews7 followers
June 25, 2011
This book was recommended to me by a friend...I had read about the book, but due to the number of lousy reviews it had received, I had never picked it up to read myself. That said...

it really isn't as bad as people say it is. Simplistic? Pretty much. Far fetched? Quite. Derogatory towards the mental health field? Absolutely. Entertaining? You betcha. I don't know about you, but sometimes I want to be flat out entertained...and this book did the trick.

I was hooked from the get go. While this book will probably never win a Pulitzer, it WILL keep you turning pages into the wee hours of the night. I found myself intrigued, amused and horrified and different aspects of the story line, and I read it in less than two days. Like I said, it's really not as bad as some of these other reviews say it is.

If you're looking for earth shattering, life changing literature, than keep looking because this is most certainly NOT your book. If you're looking for an escape for a while, try this one. You will enjoy it.
Profile Image for Crystal.
545 reviews40 followers
October 4, 2010
Why I read this: I was asked by the publicist if I would like to read it and I really like the titles put out by Mira Books. I read the description and I knew I was hooked and had to read this one.

How is the novel driven: Action and character, since this is a suspense/thriller novel, action is the dominant driving force, but character development is key as well.

My thoughts: I have read mixed reviews so I wasn't sure what I was going to think about this one before I started. But as I started reading this one and as I finished I realized I'm on the gushing side of this one.

Saving Max hooked me from the first page which takes place in the present and then the book starts and goes back to the point in time where the prologue occurred and then the events after. It's an intriguing start and when the event that occurs in the prologue finally occurs in the timeline of the book - I found I was still really shocked.

As the book continues, the suspense ratchets up. I went through so many emotions and so many things that I thought was happening only for the author to keep proving me wrong. Then there is a final aha moment where I figured it out, but it doesn't end there, I was kept on the edge of my seat right up until the end.

The suspense is very tightly written and it is something that will keep the suspense lover intrigued through the book. I liked the mother of an autistic child (Max has Asperger's) angle and how that mother had a high-stress job as well as being a single-mother yet she still did the best she could for her child. The book is well-written, the characters are very intriguing. There is some romance, some family, lots of suspense and it is just a great book. I think this is one I'll be recommending for awhile.

Danielle is a character I think most moms will relate to, she is simply trying to balance a career with a personal life and then add a special needs child on top of that. But she loves him like every mother loves her child no matter what the problems are and she simply wants the best for him, and she never stops wanting the best for him and will sacrifice herself and take risks to make sure he is taken care of. I think of her as an admirable character and I really like how she is developed through the book.

When I read Heather Gudenkauf's The Weight of Silence for review last year - it was her first book and I felt like it was one of those iffy things, will I like it or won't I, but again it was a Mira book and I love this Harlequin Imprint. I ended up loving The Weight of Silence and that is how I feel about Saving Max as well. Antoinette van Heugten is an author worth giving that first chance, and after you read her I'm sure you will want to read more from her and as soon as possible (hint, hint Mira books and Antoinette!)
Profile Image for PinkAmy loves books, cats and naps .
2,658 reviews249 followers
August 26, 2015
Grade: F+

SAVING MAX started off as a 5 star masterpiece, but quickly descended into a 0 star joke. The blurb left me hopeful for a DEFENDING JACOB-like story of a mother blind to the behavior of her son and in the first chapters I saw glimpses of brilliance. I didn't care that Danielle seemed overbearing and without insight into her son's problems. Parents are sometimes in denial of their kids' issues and they don't always have the life experience to distinguish the ranges of typical behaviors for an age that professionals do. I've seen parents like Danielle blinded by their love, which isn't criticism because they should be their children's best advocates.

Soon the plot took a nosedive from within the realm of possibility to the most overwrought, melodramatic movie you'd see on LIFETIME TV. You've heard the term from the sublime to the ridiculous. Add a dose of steroids to the mix and you have SAVING MAX.

Antoinette van Heugten's writing is engaging, kept me reading the abysmal plot, hoping for a somewhat realistic conclusion or payoff. It's a shame that her characters were so extreme. Her bio says she's a former international trial lawyer, but her courtroom scenes lack the realism of American courts. She mischaracterizes some of the psychiatric illnesses in SAVING MAX, for example she says a child is suffering from Munchhausen Syndrome by Proxy, but the disorder is one given to the perpetrators, not the victims of the illness. She's said to be writing a sequel to the SAVING MAX, i won't list the title to avoid spoiling anyone. I will hold out hope, since the has the ability to write great sentences, that she'll improve in her plot and character development and with better research.
13 reviews1 follower
April 4, 2011
This book was not unlike the fastest rinky-dink roller coaster ride at a local carnival: high drama, fast pace, occasional highlights, but alas, not particularly memorable when recalled the next day. I read this in about four hours on a Sunday afternoon, a strong testament, I suppose, to its suspenseful narrative. Although the two main characters, Danielle and her son Max, are disappointingly one-dimensional, theirs is a predicament that demands a resolution. I felt the need to know what happened. By the time the resolution occurred, though, I was struck more by the outlandishness of the plot than anything else. Van Heugten seemed to get carried away by her own story, looking to outdo herself on each page. By continuously looking for the next you'll-never-believe-this scene, she manages to create a story that is, well, unbelievable. One bad apple? Maybe. Two starts to tear at the fabric of credulity. I'll give her points for imagination and story-telling, no small feat, but I don't think I need to go to the carvinal when it's in town the next time.
59 reviews
March 20, 2011
i read this book quickly (in a day and a half) but that is no indication that it was a good book. this is a book club selection and our meeting it next sunday. i only purchased the book on friday and with current plans for the weekend, i had to cram now.

the characters were so flat. you never really got to know max or danielle or why she was confident, other than being his mother, that he wasn't crazy and did't kill a fellow mental patient. the writing itself was rather tired. if the author used electricity to explain one more thing, i was going to scream. i didn't really get interested until the middle of the book and quickly fell out of interest again when the courtroom work came.

i think the book could've been done better in more skilled hands. i needed more character development and maybe some reorginization of the events in the book to have pulled me in from the beginning.
Profile Image for Harlequin Books.
18.3k reviews2,793 followers
Read
December 24, 2014
Reading Log - Day 1

Danielle's life seems to be falling apart in every way imaginable. Her job is in danger. Her best friend needs her because her life is falling apart. Most importantly, her son needs her. My heart goes out to her when she finally hears what the doctor diagnose him with. The list seems never-ending and quite hopeless. If it wasn't for the one night she spent talking with a complete stranger, I would say she has nothing positive to hold on to and even that could potentially be filled with more stress. Good thing she is a lawyer and has proven she has a large amount of strength because she needs it with no one she can lean on for support. As for Max, it has to be so frightening for him. The rare moments he lets his mom see that fear will tug at your heart like it did at mine.

Anyone else feel like telling Dr. Fastow off? He irritates me to no end!

Reading Log Day 2

I'm still going to read more today but I had to stop to cook dinner and thought I would come share my thoughts while they are still fresh. All I can say is OMG! The way part 1 ended caught me by surprise even though I was expecting a murder at some point in the story. Part 2 has its surprises right from the start as well. Poor Danielle! Poor Max! Is he the murderer? I'm not sure. Yes, Danielle is definitely in denial over many aspects of her son's mental evaluation but is she totally off the mark or is there really something else happening at Maitland that she needs to protect Max from? If it wasn't for the fact that my daughter is beginning to grumble that she is hungry, I wouldn't have been able to stop reading. She is doing some of the prep work for our dinner but I can hear she is just about ready for me so I'll leave you with another question.

Do you think Danielle should be allowed to see her son before the trial? Were you surprised by Max's lawyer? (Please no spoilers!)

Reading Log Day 3

The more Danielle digs, the more she finds that makes me wonder who really killed that poor child. However, she is taking so many risks that sooner or later everything will fall apart and she could be putting herself in real danger. I can't imagine what it would be like to have my child in as much trouble as her son is in. I would probably be doing everything I could to help also but I can't help but feel she should be listening to her lawyer and not making things more difficult for the case. Antoinette van Heugten definitely has me feeling the confusion and desperation right along with Danielle but I'm still able to think straight and can see nothing but trouble coming Danielle and Max's way.

I think I have a new favorite character, Doaks. When he goes up in the attic, I could picture it perfectly and could hear his grumbling clearly. The poor man, hehehehe.

Would you be taking the same risks as Danielle or would you depend on the system discovering the truth?

Reading Log Day 4

Is this ending seriously creepy or is it just me? Even though the truth comes out before the very end, I found myself turning the pages even faster to find out how it all unfolds and it just kept getting creepier and creepier! I thought her lawyer was going to lose it on her, with every right. Doaks was beside himself. I wouldn't want to be the one upsetting him. And, poor Max! The court sure wasn't a good experience for him.

I found the setting of the psych. facility intriguing and I loved the final chapters in the courtroom. Did you have a favorite part?



Happy Reading,
Kim S., Harlequin Books ambassador
Profile Image for Meagen Hudson.
117 reviews6 followers
July 2, 2014
Ugh. I don't even know where to start. I understand that this is a work of fiction but it was SO FAR out there that it was almost cheesy. First off, I"m pretty sure you can't stalk someone, break into her house, steal her personal property, and then use that stolen property as evidence in court. This "shocking" evidence (which was obtained so illegally and would never be allowed, ugh, I seriously can't get over that) obviously lays out everything. Apparently, every crazy person writes a journal that details all their secrets and past endevors. Oh yea, let's mention the "love" story. The main character has a one night stand and immediately falls in love although the next time she sees him is a week or so later when SHOCK he's set up to be her attorney. Seriously. The main character is also an attorney which is apparently a clever way to make it plausible for a crazy lady to show up late to her own court date (half a day late and after violating bond by taking off her tracking device and fleeing the state) with stolen evidence to represent herself. The judge allows all sorts of questioning of witnesses to go on which should not be allowed (leading, speculating, hearsay, etc) and the author makes it a point to have the judge say "normally, I wouldn't allow this because what you are doing is illegal but since I'm the judge, I'll let it go". After all is said and done, the murderer gets away (she just happens to escape from court after being revealed as a murderer...). Also, there is a doctor who is using his patients as testers for a new, experimental drug, which is also just another plot device to explain the patient's hostile behavior which actually has nothing to do with the overall story line. The doctor also disappears SHOCK. So instead of resolving anything, every one acts totally crazy and then the antagonists just disappear. The end. Don't waste your time.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Sharon.
1,381 reviews256 followers
January 3, 2019
Danielle Park is an attorney and lately her son, Max has been giving her grief as his behaviour has been out of control and she's not certain what's causing him to act like this. In her eyes, Max could never do no wrong and was a joy to be around, so why the sudden change in him.

Then one day tragedy strikes and Danielle doesn't know who to turn to for help. When the unimaginable and unthinkable happens, Danielle's world is turned upside down.

Saving Max was an intriguing read which I enjoyed reading. Recommended.
Profile Image for Laura.
542 reviews25 followers
November 1, 2010
i could not put this book down, in fact i stayed up until 3 am this morning finishing it, because i needed to know how everything panned out. I love books about people dealing with psychological problems and disorders and this was probably the best one i've read yet!!! def. go pick this book up, you won't regret it!!!

This story is about a young teenage boy named max, who has severe or what is thought to be severe psychological problems, when his mother finds out he's been using drugs she decides to take him to Maitland which is the best psychological hospital there is. But things aren't always as they appear they tell max's mother that he has extremely severe problems and is a harm to himself and society, he's constantly drugged and restrained.

When max is accused of murdering his neighbor with similar psychological problems, his mother jumps on the defensive, but what if you found him in the victims room, covered in his blood, clutching the murder weapon. How well do you actually know your son, and how much would you risk to prove his innocence.
Profile Image for Jaime.
1,612 reviews105 followers
July 12, 2016
I had mixed feelings about this book. It did have its good points: the concept is interesting, and the writing wasn’t bad. I did read to the end, after all, and my patience with books this year is very short. But it definitely had its weak points. We don’t really get to know Max, despite him being at the center of the book. And for being a lawyer, Danielle is awful flippant about jumping bail and breaking the law. I just didn’t find that part of her character believable. Yes, a mother will do whatever she can to help her son, but you can argue that if she was unsuccessful, she would be in a position worse than before. Should a mother take that risk? And because we are never able to connect to Max, her arguments about his mental state sound more like blind denial than an informed opinion. All in all, she just goes about things the wrong way, coming off as hysterical and rigid even to the reader who is supposed to be on her side.
Profile Image for Jools.
938 reviews8 followers
March 28, 2016
This story was just too outlandish for me. When her teenage son is committed to a psychiatric facility this mother, who is a high-powered attorney about to make partner in her prestigious New York firm, is told her son is in the throes of schizophrenia which will become worse, more violent, etc. of course her son is too precious for her to believe that. So she easily steals a key card for the entire psych hospital (yeah like that could happen) and crawls in the dirt peering in windows to see how they are sabotaging her sweet son.

I was pretty disgusted with all this by now and only 22% through the book!

I deleted it.
Profile Image for Krissy.
1,677 reviews344 followers
February 6, 2017
The writing annoyed me at times and the story was full of convenient coincidences and very improbable actions BUT it still kept me interested until the very end. So for that reason I'll rate it 3 stars.

Side note: The narrator of the audiobook, Therese Plummer, did a good job except for the fact that she was a loud swallower. I hate that.
Profile Image for Madeline.
269 reviews2 followers
February 12, 2022
2.5 stars… not quite terrible but also not a very well written book. It had the potential to be a really good thriller but I think the foundation of the book and it’s characters was just not strong enough for any of the decisions made through the trial to really make sense or resonate. It all just seemed way too far fetched and the resolution was too easy.
Profile Image for Ashley.
60 reviews
September 15, 2023
Interesting story with poor writing. The last 100 pages were somewhat redeeming.
142 reviews2 followers
Read
December 30, 2017
Most books I like. This one held me captive and kept me reading, but I'm not sure I liked it. More said on book club day. ;)
Profile Image for Christie (The Ludic Reader).
1,007 reviews62 followers
February 2, 2011
Van Heugten’s debut novel, Saving Max, is the story of single mother, Danielle, whose son, Max, is accused of murder while in a psychiatric facility for evaluation. Danielle has taken Max from Manhattan, where she works as a lawyer, to the renowned Maitland clinic in Plano, Iowa, where Max can be assessed. Although he’s already been diagnosed with Asperger's (a mild form of autism), Max’s behaviour has become increasingly more troublesome (so we’re told) and Danielle is out of options.

Once at Maitland, Danielle meets Marianne, another mother whose son, Jonas, is there to be assessed. Jonas has several severe problems including being non-verbal. Danielle admires Marianne’s devotion to her son and constantly questions her own abilities as a mother. When Jonas turns up dead and Max is found holding the smoking gun (figuratively speaking), her mother lion instinct kicks in and she stops at nothing to get to the bottom of what really happened.

Saving Max is a rather pedestrian whodunit. The characters are stock figures: Doaks, for example, is the hard-boiled ex-cop who now works as a private investigator. It’s almost impossible to believe he’s never used a computer yet he claims not to know what “googled” means. He says “ain’t” and calls Danielle “cookie”. Then there’s the guy she slept with once after meeting him at a bar. Theirs is a love connection – which we’re supposed to buy. In a completely contrived twist of fate, he end up being the lawyer hired by Danielle’s NYC law firm to represent her. Danielle herself is resourceful and smart, but I never connected with her – not even as a mother. And this is 2010, am I really expected to believe that she’d get a poodle perm and wear pant suits?

Then there are some problems with the story – little things a reader shouldn’t notice if they are wholly invested in the book. van Heugten has Danielle on a flight back from Phoenix where she has gone to retrieve some evidence. In one chapter Danielle is buckling in as the plane begins its descent. A couple paragraphs later, she’s asking for a coffee and settling in to continue reading the evidence she’s found. A couple chapters later, she’s working her way through the traffic in Des Moines; two chapters after that, she’s on the plane again. The author also compensates for showing, by telling the reader things when it suits the story. Danielle knows, for example, the nursing schedule at 11pm. How? I hate when I notice stuff like that.

The story itself is written in present tense, perhaps to give the reader a sense of immediacy and urgency – but the story just isn’t propulsive. I understand how desperate Danielle must be to clear her son, but the pieces of this puzzle just fit together too neatly. And the ending is trite.

All that said, I had no trouble reading the book. I think van Heugten might have the goods. Her background as a lawyer showed in the court scenes. The writing was strightforward, although not particularly original. The story had legs. What this book lacked, for me, was any really connection to the people who inhabited its pages. Ultimately, if you don’t care about the characters, you’re not going to care about their fate.

Profile Image for Camiron.
41 reviews
October 7, 2020
[Review coming when it's not late at night] Now that it's not late, I'm gonna delve into the review! This took me a few months to read because I kept avoiding it buuuut I'm finished now.

*Somewhere between 1.5 and 2 stars*

*Warnings that I don't talk about in the review because they didn't lower my rating but you might want to know about anyways: Some parts in the beginning have quite a bit of language, there's a sex scene between two adults a few chapters in, and there's a part at the end with a pretttty graphic description of Jonas being murdered

Saving Max was an interesting book, I wanted to keep reading and find out what happened and whodunnit. The writing and characters, however, kept me from zooming through it.

Danielle, the main character/main character's mom upset me SO much. I know she was trying to save her son from going to jail, but did so many illegal, problematic andd maybe slightly immoral things in the process (things turned out okay for both of them but still, like sneaking into a hospital to visit him, breaking security cameras etc etc). Although I do appreciate her perseverance and love for Max. There wasn't much character development on any of the characters, though.

It also wasn't a great portrayal of the world of psychiatry or ASD, hoWEVer I do appreciate Heugten not trying to write from Max's perspective when she hasn't experienced the world in the way someone with autism has.

The writing style was pretty repetitive and had a lot of similies that confused me -- ones that described voices but the things compared to said voices didn't have any sound in the first place?? The ending was strange too, and I probably would've given 2.5 stars if the ending made sense but it really didn't. The person (no spoilers here) who killed Jonas escaped from the courthouse and wasn't seen or heard from again until Danielle gets a letter in the mail talking in a fake-sweet way about their new child victims and then nothing else happens. The whole ending was maybe half a chapter long since all characters found out who it was; it was so speedy.

To wrap this up, the story was interesting but the characters, lack of character development and writing style/unrealistic portrayal of some things (despite having professionals review it before publication) kept me from enjoying it more. It was Heugten's first novel though, and she has written a few since and is now working on a sequel to this one so I will probably read that when it comes out, because as I said before I did like the story!)
Profile Image for Cherise.
476 reviews51 followers
October 23, 2010
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 Danielle’s 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
Profile Image for Michelle.
92 reviews1 follower
March 12, 2012
This book kept my attention, and the plot was fairly interesting, but there were a lot of loose ends. Danielle, a high powered NY attorney, is spending too much time in Iowa, where her autistic teenage son Max is undergoing psychiatric evaluation at Maitland Psychiatric Hospital. Things quickly spiral out of control when Max is diagnosed with psychosis on top of his Asperger's Syndrome. Just before the diagnosis and shortly thereafter, Max is involved in a pattern of violent incidents towards Jonas, a fellow patient at Maitland. Max is eventually found by his mother in pool of blood next to Jonas's dead body, murder weapon in hand.

Danielle tries to remove Max from the crime scene, and the two are subsequently arrested. While out on bail, Danielle works hard risking everything to prove that her son is not psychotic and did not commit the murder. She believes that he was framed. Her investigation takes her across the country, and she jumps bail while attempting to find the information that will prove Max's innocence.

While the resolution of the story is quite disturbing, what really bothered me was the emphasis the author placed on Danielle's career. There were large portions of the story dedicated to her attempts at making partner in her law firm, but when things begin to go awry with Max, this is almost completely ignored. Van Heugten only touches upon this very briefly at the end of the novel, dedicating one or two sentences to wrapping up a major plot point.
Profile Image for Tasha enderby.
318 reviews7 followers
July 23, 2011
I found this book at the thrift store, I spied it on the Target shelf of books to read a while ago and thought for a quarter it could be worth trying to read. So I picked it up but it will quickly going to the half price book store because it was a decent read I would not be likely recommend the book or reread it again myself.

This is a story of Mother's, it makes you mad, sad and stricken all at the same time. I will warn you it takes some getting into and for the first 100 or so pages it wasn't a story that really captured me. Danielle is a loving mother of a young teenage boy that has a lot of issue's more then just the teenage drama, he is autistic but she makes the hard choices in order to give him a healthy, happy life. She takes him to best mental health facility in which there is more wrong with the doctors who work there then the patients themselves. Max is framed for murder and Danielle risks her career, her life and faces jail time at every turn to prove that her son could not and did murder another young boy. Marianne is the mother of the boy who is murderede and through out the story the truth is revealed on who is a better mother, who understands how to love and who does not. I won't ruin the end for you because if you can read past the court room junk the discoveries is all this book has to offer.
Profile Image for Amy.
709 reviews113 followers
July 31, 2011
The idea of this book was really good but it was executed really poorly. The author does a lot of telling and not showing. We're expected to believe the mother that Max is not violent even though the story opens with Max shoving her. And on and on. The author did not do a good job at all of making me think Max was innocent. Also, parts of this are really forced. The guy she meets and falls in love with immediately turn out to be the lawyer? Bleh. But mostly, I just really hated the mom. She was incredibility dramatic (example - Iowa doesn't even have the death penalty but she keeps insisting to anyone that will listen that her son is going to be put to death for a crime he didn't commit). She's also completely idiotic. She ends up lucking into the real crime but that was just of complete chance in her trying to pin the crime (which she actually says that she is attempting to do) on someone else.

The ending was creepy and spooky but I'm not sure all the stuff that led up to it was worth the payoff.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,181 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.