Amy Grossberg and Brian Peterson grew up in a wealthy New Jersey suburb, meeting and falling in love while still in high school, then set out for college with their classmates. But in November of their Freshman Year, the two young lovers spent a night in a Delaware motel room where, after hiding her pregnancy from her family and her friends for nine months, Amy gave birth to a baby boy. Only she and Brian knew the child even existed . . . until the next morning when the newborn's corpse turned up in the motel dumpster. The case caused a countrywide outrage, and the teenagers ended up in court, desperately fighting for their lives and ultimately against each other...
Doug Most is a lifelong journalist, storyteller, editor and three-time author of non-fiction books. He lives outside Boston, Massachusetts, and now works as the Executive Editor and an Assistant Vice President at Boston University.
Journalist Doug Most has a fascinating but very sad story to tell -- that of Amy Grossberg and Brian Peterson and the baby they didn’t want. Hard to believe that two privileged and educated young people could behave so selfishly, disposing of a baby as just one more piece of trash. Based on his portrayal of the couple, their families, and their communities, it appears that their privileged upbringing and the degree to which they had been protected from ever making the wrong choice, even in little things, was a primary reason for their inability to accept and deal with the reality of a pregnancy.
I considered this a good book. It was well told. I was torn in my feelings about the whole story. I felt for the baby. I couldn't believe two eighteen year olds could be this ... stupid, for lack of a better word. I finally felt more sympathy for Brian, the father of the baby, than with Amy, the mother. I wanted to slap Amy's Mom. I just did not like the lady. I felt it was more her fault than anyone. She needed to let her child grow up and be responsible for herself, just a little bit.
A startling story of two high school kids trying to play grown up and not accepting the consequences that went along with it. She becomes pregnant and neither wanted this child, but instead of gong through adoption or even abortion they tried to wish it away and then the night that it was born they threw it away. In the end they turned on each other but child was still unwanted and sacrificed none the less. A very sad sad story but very well told by the author.
This is exactly the way I like my True Crime books. The research is incredible. He doesn't just tell us what happened with these two teenagers who had a baby and then threw it in a dumpster. He gets into their background and the background of the whole town to let us get into the minds of all the players. He also gives us a history of what has happened to other similar cases. Did these two teenagers get a break because of their upbringing? Should they be charged with murder?
A very, very good read. Never bogs down with boring details and places the crimes under discussion squarely into historical context. Worth keeping and re-reading. I have to say this book needed a thorough re-editing before its final publication; the story moved right along but some of the usage and sentence structure was just plain clumsy.
Heartbreaking true story of a young girl with what she thinks is the worst dilemma in her life, not knowing what to do. I don't think she intentionally set out to kill her baby, I feel like she was torn about letting down her family, losing her boyfriend, and having noone to talk to, I absolutely 100% feel what she did was wrong, but at 17/18 your still a child yourself. This book was well written and is good for parents to read and know they need to speak to their children about everything and be supportive no matter what situation they are in, there's always choices, the right choices
I have long admired T.C. Boyle's short story, "The Love of My Life," based on the story of Amy Grossberg and Brian Peterson. When I was gifted this read, I was excited about reading the full, true story of this case. The book certainly did not disappoint. Most does a phenomenal job of presenting the story in a way that is engaging but also thought-provoking. The emphasis that Most places on the nature of upper-middle-class parenting in the story is especially intriguing. The book flips between more reflective reporting and authentic story-telling well, and the text itself reads easily.
Incredibly gut-wrenching!! I read this book at the same time I was enrolled in a legal program at our local college. Though it wasn't planned that way, it did help me understand the court system so much better. I found this book thorough and perfect in description in every detail. Doug Most did a fabulous job walking the reader through a very emotional situation that truly tries the readers own values, morals and personal as well as political convictions. I believe it should absolutely be a "must read" book for literature classes of high school students. In the culture we live in with sexually active kids getting increasingly younger, it's so very important that they learn this frightening lesson through the story of Amy and Brian rather than through their own experience.
I ran across this book at the library looking for something else and on a whim checked it out. While the real-life story is disturbing I thought reading about it would be beneficial. It is hard to accept that our kids might not be the perfect creatures we want them to be and how denial plays a part in that. I sincerely hope that if my kids find themselves in a situation where they need help they they ask for it before it is too late.