With teeth

Kristen Arnett

Book - 2021

"From the author of the New York Times-bestselling sensation Mostly Dead Things: a surprising and moving story of two mothers, one difficult son, and the limitations of marriage, parenthood, and love If she's being honest, Sammie Lucas is scared of her son. Working from home in the close quarters of their Florida house, she lives with one wary eye peeled on Samson, a sullen, unknowable boy who resists her every attempt to bond with him. Uncertain in her own feelings about motherhood, she tries her best--driving, cleaning, cooking, prodding him to finish projects for school--while growing increasingly resentful of Monika, her confident but absent wife. As Samson grows from feral toddler to surly teenager, Sammie's life begins ...to deteriorate into a mess of unruly behavior, and her struggle to create a picture-perfect queer family unravels. When her son's hostility finally spills over into physical aggression, Sammie must confront her role in the mess--and the possibility that it will never be clean again. Blending the warmth and wit of Arnett's breakout hit, Mostly Dead Things, with a candid take on queer family dynamics, With Teeth is a thought-provoking portrait of the delicate fabric of family--and the many ways it can be torn apart"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Published
New York : Riverhead Books 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Kristen Arnett (author)
Physical Description
290 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780593191507
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Arnett (Mostly Dead Things, 2019) continues to create needed space for a genre one might call "queer unromance." As before, Arnett remains deeply interested in muggy Florida nights, the uncomfortable and the repulsive, and people getting it wrong. Sammie, mother to anti-social Samson and wife to power-player Monika, makes one cringeworthy decision after another, including biting back--with teeth--when her son bites her. Their mutual scars mark them early as the family navigates years of failure and difficulty. Sammie's profound imperfection will be a source of relief to queer parents everywhere; her bond with her son is complicated and fraught. In the opening scene, Sammie saves her son from a possible playground abduction, yet she ends up on the ground bleeding as Samson pours dirt on her. The novel's crescendo bends toward questions of plot (what is actually happening here) when the existential questions are more compelling (what is life for a not-young queer woman struggling in parenthood). Even so, this book is equal parts Florida queer and fascinating.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Arnett (Mostly Dead Things) paints a complex picture of a queer family in this well-sculpted drama. Protagonist Sammie and her wife, Monika, have a son, Samson, who proves to be an ornery and enigmatic child. (Among other things, he willfully lets a strange man attempt to abduct him at the age of four and later carries a school project doll of himself everywhere.) Sammie is the more anxious and hands-on of the parents; she works part-time as a copy editor, while laid-back Monika excels as a lawyer. In addition to doubting her fitness as a parent, Sammie misses the social life she had pre-Samson and "didn't like the way other women looked at her wife, didn't like the fact that no one looked at her that way anymore." By the time Samson's 16, he has become a skilled swimmer and retains much of his inscrutable personality, Sammie and Monika have separated, and Sammie struggles with dating. Arnett's prismlike prose is supplemented by vignettes focused on peripheral characters, such as Samson's teachers, which add some maximalist flair to the domestic story. With its vividly rendered characters, this offers an intense rendition of a modern family. Agent: Serene Hakim, Ayesha Pande Literary. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lesbian couple raises a son with a disconcerting dark side. Sammie and Monika are a gay Central Florida couple: Monika is a successful lawyer, and Sammie works part time from home as a copy editor so she can be there for their son, Samson. Even from toddlerhood, Samson is an inscrutable child. At 4, he calmly allows himself to be nearly abducted by a man on a playground; as a fourth grader he carries around a doll double of himself that Sammie helped him make for a school project. And Sammie is ill at ease in her mom role: She sees herself as "a former manager now reduced to running a household. And…not even running it all that well." When Monika calls Sammie one night from the ER claiming that Samson has bitten another child, Sammie must confront the fundamental terror she feels in the face of parenting her son: "Maybe love is always a thing," she thinks, "that's resting on the edge of violence." As Samson grows, his behavior pushes over that edge, and Sammie must confront her own destructive impulses and the role she plays in her son's, and her family's, unravelling. Arnett writes movingly of the loneliness Sammie feels in the queer community once she becomes a parent, at times even flashing outside of Sammie's point of view for brief interludes to show how outsiders see her in ways that she cannot clearly see herself. As in her first novel, Mostly Dead Things (2019), Arnett deftly examines the psychological dynamics of a family, raising complicated questions about whether mothers can ever truly understand how to raise sons and whether our children, too often, are mirrors of our own worst tendencies. A novel that is not afraid to look at the underbelly of parenting, queer relationships, and middle age. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The man took her son's hand and walked casually toward the playground exit. Sammie had left him on the swing set. He'd just learned to work the swing himself without her pushing, which was a relief, so she let him stay on for a few more minutes while she cleaned up and gathered their things. She'd said, I'll be right back and Keep pumping your legs, you're doing great, and then she'd walked down to the gate that led to the main exit, passing a woman with a double stroller bogged down in diaper bags and a kid so big that their legs hung down either side. It was stiflingly hot outside, even though it was already December, and the woman was huffing and puffing her way through the silty dirt with all that weight. She had on a pink visor with a palm tree and the word Orlando embroidered in cursive script. She was muttering something Sammie couldn't make out-"Many, many," it sounded like, or maybe "Money, money." It sounded like crazy-person gibberish. Sammie hurried past so she wouldn't end up getting involved. There was a garbage can near her car, but it was rancid and overflowing already, so she wadded her son's half-eaten lunch up tight in its paper bag and dropped it onto the front seat. It was so scorching inside the car that she opened all the doors and stood outside for a minute to let the heat roil out, because Samson would start crying if he felt "sticky," and she was too tired to deal with it. A cloud of gnats circled her head, thirsty for the sweat beading on her neck, and she swatted at them absentmindedly. She picked up her son's bottle of overheated lemonade from the floor, grimacing at the chunks of backwash before dumping it out on the sun-soft asphalt and tossing it back onto the seat. But it bounced and rolled off onto the floor, and her back hurt too much to pick it up, so she didn't. Her back hurt because she'd spent the last three months picking up Samson and taking him to the bathroom every night after he wet himself. Four years old and still wetting the bed-but then every child was different, that's what the doctor said. Sammie wasn't sure she believed it. So she left the bottle there and turned back around. There was the man, walking away with her son. "Hey," she said, because no other words would come. "Hey!" The man and Samson didn't stop. They didn't walk any faster, either. Just kept strolling toward the exit on the far side of the playground. Her son was holding the man's hand as if he'd known him his whole life. The guy was medium height, in his forties maybe, with thinning dark blond hair and a scruff of beard, wearing a gray polo tucked into dark blue jeans. White sneakers. Her son had on khaki shorts and his yellow T-shirt with Ruff and Tumble, the cartoon dalmatians, on the front. His hair was a real cloud of curls from the humidity; it was well past time for a haircut, but Samson had thrown a fit when she tried to take him. Sammie jumped the fence. She didn't know she was going to until she did-didn't even know she even could, really; she wasn't particularly athletic, and her body was small-but she vaulted it and landed directly on the other side. And then she ran. She kicked up a storm of mulch, and one of her sandals fell off, but she kept going. "Hey!" she kept yelling, louder and louder, but neither the man nor her son looked back. Her son never listened when she called him, never responded to his name or to her commands. The man had led her son through the gate, and now they were walking through the parking lot, headed toward a big red truck. She stopped yelling and ran faster. He opened the passenger door. Samson just stood there beside him. She could see the man's lips moving, but she couldn't make out any of the words. Her son, quiet all day every day, looked up at the man and smiled. Actually smiled. Full-on toothy grin. Sammie started screaming. Not just a scream-a prolonged siren shriek, rising at the end like the wail of an ambulance. Still nothing from the man. Nothing from her son. Could anyone hear her? When she finally reached them, the man was buckling Samson into the front seat. She pushed past him and yanked her son out. Then her back, already strained from running, seized up altogether. She crumpled and almost dropped him onto the asphalt, catching him by the arm just in time. She was wheezing. Out of breath. Her foot was bleeding, she saw now, and so was her left thigh from when she'd scratched it hurtling the chain-link. "You!" she said. Took a breath. Took another breath. "You. My son. You." The man put up his hands, as if to ward her off. Ward her off! Unreal. He was about to abscond with her kid in the middle of the afternoon and he was acting like she was the crazy one. Then again, she probably looked crazy. She felt crazy. He didn't look scared at all; in fact, he looked concerned. She studied his face, tanned and wrinkled around his deep-set eyes. He looked like the kind of guy who smiled a lot. He looked like someone's nice neighbor. "I was just showing him my truck," he said. "Kid said he liked trucks." Samson was yanking at her hand to get away, and she gripped harder. "Your truck. Your truck?" "I swear." The man smiled at her, revealing a line of very large bright teeth. Super white teeth, all even. Maybe not even real teeth. Too perfect for that face, with its crooked nose and scratchy beard and smile wrinkles. "I am calling the police," Sammie said. But where was her phone? Back in her car, along with her keys, along with all her stuff. Where was her other shoe? Halfway across the playground. "Mom." Samson tugged her hand again, sweaty fingers wriggling. "It's got a CB radio." She looked down at her kid, and he looked back at her with that same indifferent look he always had. No grin for Mom, even though she'd saved him from imminent danger. No thought at all to how her heart was hammering inside her chest. She could have a heart attack right there in the parking lot, and he'd just climb up into the truck over her downed corpse. She looked down again at her bleeding foot. One of her toenails had ripped half off, the littlest one on her right foot, and she was standing in a small puddle of her own blood. "I am calling the cops," she repeated. "I am calling them right now." The man closed the passenger door. Then he skirted around the front of the truck and opened the driver's side door. "Don't you get in that truck," Sammie yelled. Samson was squirming, and she could barely keep a grip on him. She stepped back, dragging her son out of the truck's path. "Don't you dare get in that truck! I am calling the cops, and you are going to stay right here!" The man didn't listen, didn't even look at her, just climbed in and started the engine. He was going to leave; he was going to drive away from this, and there was nothing she could do to stop him. "Help!" she yelled. Samson wriggled and nearly escaped, so she caught his T-shirt by the neck and gripped him there, too hard, she knew, because he made a squeak and then stopped moving. "Someone help me! Child abduction!" There wasn't anybody else in the parking lot. She looked around frantically and saw that the woman who'd been pushing the stroller with the kid too big for it was setting out a picnic lunch. Only fifty feet away, maybe less, and still the woman didn't acknowledge her screams for help. She pulled Samson a few feet farther back, worried the man might plow the truck straight into them. But he just eased the truck around Sammie and her son and pulled out of the lot. It was a Dodge, a bright, glossy red Dodge. She strained to see the license plate and started repeating the numbers aloud: "GN5 8V6, GN5 8V6, GN5 8V6." Samson was on his feet but hanging limp, dragging like he weighed a thousand pounds, the way he always did when he was being forced to do something he didn't want to do. She kept repeating the plate number as she struggled back to the playground, steering him in front of her with one hand clamped around his neck and a fistful of his T-shirt. There was something in the sole of her foot, glass, maybe, and her toe was throbbing, and her back hurt so bad she couldn't breathe. It felt like the truck had run her over. Throughout all this, the mother with the stroller had been sitting calmly nearby, at a picnic table under the park's solitary oak tree. When they reached the fence, she called out to the woman to call 911. Then she sat down right where she stood and wept. "Ants," Samson said, rubbing at his neck. It had a wild red mark where Sammie had grabbed him, and his collar was all yanked out. His face was dirty. He could use a wet wipe. The woman came over and handed her a cell phone. "I didn't know what to tell them," she whispered, as if the situation were some kind of embarrassing secret. Her own kid was still sitting in the stroller, Velcro shoes kicking so hard the bags on top nearly fell off. Sammie wondered if the kid had some kind of problem that required them to be in a stroller well past the usual age. But what did that matter? She needed to focus. Sammie took the phone and spat out the license plate number to the dispatcher before she forgot it. Then she backed up and tried to explain what had happened, calling it an "attempted abduction." She described what the man looked like, what he'd been wearing. She told them about his too-perfect teeth. How his truck had a CB radio. She ran through everything she remembered, which wasn't much. She could barely remember her own name. It had all happened so fast, sped by in a blur. Then, in a fit of embarrassment, she hung up-only to realize she hadn't taken down any information. She didn't know the dispatcher's name; all she knew was that it was a woman. Or she thought it was a woman, anyway, with that high-pitched voice. And Sammie had hung up before giving them a number to contact her. How would they reach her? Was the callback number logged automatically? It was the stranger's cell phone, not Sammie's. Would she need to call back and start all over with someone new? Already the license plate number had flown from her brain. She looked down at her son leaning against the fence. "Ants," he said again, and he kept saying it: "ants," "ants," "ants." And then she felt them crawling up her legs. Sammie leaped to her feet and dusted them off, then moved the both of them around the corner to a spot without any bugs. There were hundreds of dandelions peppering the grass, wild, fluffy things that stirred in the breeze, but her child picked up an abandoned straw from a fast-food cup and started playing with it. She was going into shock, she could feel it. Her entire body was shutting down. She knew she should call her wife, tell her what happened, but all she had was this borrowed phone, and she couldn't remember the number. Why don't I know my wife's phone number by heart? she wondered. What if there was an emergency? Samson dug the straw into the ground and scooped some up, then blew into the other end. Dirt rained down onto Sammie's head, sprinkled down her top. Then he did it again. Sammie just sat there, too exhausted to stop him. Finally, the other woman came over to get her phone. When she saw what Samson was doing, she took the straw away herself and tucked it in her pants pocket. "Don't put things from the ground in your mouth," she said. "That's not nice." As she walked away, Samson picked up a fistful of dirt. He held it over his mother's head, slowly opened his fingers, and let the dirt land where it wanted. Excerpted from With Teeth: A Novel by Kristen Arnett 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.