Praise for THE SATURDAY BOY by David Fleming:
“The Saturday Boy is funny and poignant, sometimes at the same time, the way life is.” —Sara Pennypacker, New York Times Bestselling author of the Clementine series and Summer of the Gypsy Moths
“Fleming reminds us of the immeasurable value of a handwritten letter, how this tangible connection becomes something we can hang on to, for as long as we need it.” —Suzanne LaFleur, author of Love, Aubrey and Eight Keys
“Debut novelist Fleming ably limns Derek’s manic, Joey Pigza–styled interior life with a light hand, capturing the humorous aspects of the boy’s self-perpetuating problems.” —BCCB, starred review
"[A] tender portrait of a boy under stress." —Kirkus Reviews
“Fleming has done a superb job of not only making the characters believable, but also of keeping an underlying tension in the story. Children with parents who are deployed will find a kindred soul in Derek, and other readers will come to better understand what it’s like for them.” —School Library Journal
“Fleming's debut skillfully depicts how the stresses of loss and other forces beyond one's control test the bonds of family and friends.” —Publishers Weekly
"...children whose lives are similar to Derek’s will identify with the confusion and isolation of war and find a comrade here." —Horn Book
Gr 5–8—It's been more than eight months since Derek, 11, has seen his dad, a soldier who flies Apache helicopters and is stationed in Afghanistan for another tour. They keep in touch through letters that Derek keeps in his dad's old school lunch box. He's read them so often he knows exactly which one to grab for each of his moods. Derek is a good-hearted kid who just naturally attracts trouble-he doesn't mean to, but he's always in the wrong place at the wrong time and often the victim. He's also impulsive and has a hard time staying focused, which adds to his problems. Budgie, who vacillates between being a friend and being a real pain, has something going on with him, but what it is Derek can't figure out. He and his mom have a loving relationship and are trying their best to take care of each other while his dad is away. Derek's life, although complicated, is not too bad, until the day he sees his dad on the news and his world falls apart. Fleming has done a superb job of not only making the characters believable, but also of keeping an underlying tension in the story. Children with parents who are deployed will find a kindred soul in Derek, and other readers will come to better understand what it's like for them.—Nancy P. Reeder, Heathwood Hall Episcopal School, Columbia, SC
Life can be rough when your dad is at war. Derek knows. Fifth grade is hard enough without landing in the principal's office. It gets even harder when his best childhood friend becomes his chief tormentor. It was Budgie's mom who found him at the bus stop one rainy morning and told him it was a Saturday, and the nickname "Saturday Boy" clings, along with every other classroom embarrassment. He just can't seem to keep his head down. But Derek is armed with 91 letters from his dad. He knows just the one to pull out when he's mad or sad or just missing his superhero sidekick. Debut author Fleming deftly balances the building tension of the wartime absence of Derek's supportive father against the trials of being bullied at school. Through Derek's first-person narration, readers are drawn to the likable boy, who reveals the tension caused by anxiety for a parent's safety. To escape his troubles at school, Derek imagines heroic adventures with his dad and misses the clues to developments at home. While he is surrounded by loving and understanding adults, the focal point of his peer interactions is Budgie, who plays a large role in unmasking the pressures of a family living with the sacrifices of war. Fleming wields a light touch with the story's pacing and a steady hand for hard reality in this tender portrait of a boy under stress. (Fiction. 10-13)