If only Max could remember the night that left his best friend in a coma.
Max, an 11-year-old who’s almost 6 feet tall, doesn’t know how Will, one of his best friends, ended up unconscious by the side of the road—but it’s probably his own fault. If only he hadn’t encouraged Will to go into the nature preserve with Max and Joey! If only Max hadn’t run away! It must be his fault, because Joey won’t even speak to him now. Even before Will’s injury, Max had been having a rough time coping with his newly diagnosed ADHD and the recent growth spurt that left adults unfairly treating him like an aggressor. Now he has a detective asking him questions, Joey’s older brother making veiled threats, and his mom fighting with his weird-but-awesome Uncle Cal. With the help of budding student journalist Samantha, Max tries to solve the mystery of Will’s injury. Luckily, he has an assist from the ADHD–management techniques he’s learning from his insightful therapist: anger management, apologizing, emoting, exercise, and not procrastinating. While the novel, whose main characters are White, sometimes wobbles between “whodunit starring a neurodiverse detective” and “therapeutic book about ADHD against the backdrop of an ostensible mystery,” the rising danger to Max keeps the story gripping.
Mystery and just a little peril make an absorbing vehicle for an exploration of ADHD.
(Mystery. 9-12)