I had never read a book as clearly marketed to tween girls before, and when I saw this book on the free book shelf, it had such a retrotastic cover, that I wanted it just to look at while listening to old records. Basically, I wanted to try something new, while still scratching that nostalgia itch. And then, I read it. I was surprised at how few surprises there were.
SPOILERS AHEAD:
Marcy is a bookish 14-year old girl who followed her mom's dieting advice and got skinny enough for boys to notice. In what is perhaps the most surprising aspect of this book, this is treated as a positive development and one step on the way to becoming a happy member of society. Her teacher invites her to be a junior camp counselor over the summer, and when her senior gets poison ivy (nefariously applied), ends up with more responsibilities than she expected.
There is a boy who all the girls like because he is super attractive. He also flirts with everyone, but if you go to his room, he will just show you pictures of himself and talk about his success in sports. I thought that maybe this character was going to be shown to have some redeeming qualities at some point, and maybe turn the whole stereotype on its head, but that doesn't happen. He does help try to find the missing camper at the end, but then again, everybody does.
There is another boy, who is also cute, but not as cute, who plays guitar and is gentle and humorous in various situations. He takes an immediate liking to Marcy and they go for make-out dates, while never going all the way. I thought that we were going to learn that just because a boy has all traits of the "deep guy," that doesn't necessarily make him the best romantic partner. I thought maybe some of what he was presenting was a facade, but that isn't the case, and he rises to the challenge of being the perfect gentleman in every situation, only saying one creepy thing while they are making out and Marcy both wants to keep making out, but doesn't want to go all the way.
To paraphrase, he tells Marcy "you wouldn't want to see me horny and unsatisfied." But anyways, that's all fine in this story.
There is one camper who nobody can relate to. She says vicious things to everybody, and poisons her cabin counselor (Marcy's senior). So, of course, I thought we would find out that she actually cares about the people around her just a little bit, and that the other campers were unnecessarily alienating her. It turns out her unseen home life is the only reason we have to sympathize with her, and she runs away at the end of the book, and continues to talk shit to everybody when they find her.
End spoilers?
There is a moral quandary in the book, which is that the more Marcy pays attention to her budding romance, the less attention she pays to her cabin. The head counselor, who is her teacher from school reminds her that life is just a series of choices that nobody learns to make perfectly.
I upped the rating of this book from a 2 to a 3, because I actually like that the book doesn't present any issues in black and white morality. Yes, Marcy should have paid more attention to her cabin, but only by about one hour, and if she had, she would have missed that formative lesson. It could have gone much further to present stereotypes as misleading, but instead the book just uses stereotypes as character types. And... That's it!