43 pages • 1 hour read
Nick HornbyA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Sam Jones is the protagonist of Slam as well as its narrator, who recounts the story of how he became a parent two years ago as a 16-year-old. He is a dynamic character who undergoes significant personal changes after his girlfriend, Alicia, tells him she is pregnant. Sam is a somewhat unreliable narrator, in part due to his age, and in part due to his feelings about becoming a teen parent. Sam openly admits to manipulating the reader and leaving out information that might make the reader less sympathetic toward him: “Actually, I don’t want to tell you what [she] said. You’ll end up feeling sorry for her, which isn’t what I want” (75). At the same time, he is candid about his failings and insecurities. When he introduces himself, for example, he reveals what he considers to be his most embarrassing qualities: He talks to his Tony Hawk poster, his mother was a teenager parent and his friends seem to have crushes on her, and he becomes a teenage parent himself.
Sam is skeptical of relationships and of adulthood, and while he is a deeply emotional person, he rarely reveals this part of himself, instead opting to stay quiet most of the time: “A lot of things don’t seem worth arguing about to me” (251).
By Nick Hornby