Dogface starts out with an outstanding premise, but unfortunately falls short of potential, at least for me. First, the good points. Loren is an outstanding character, and has much in common with teens I have known. He is very intelligent, and quite capable of seeing through the inconsistencies and absurdities of adult logic. While adults in the novel consider him to be mixed up, he is far more rational than any of them. His mother fits some parents I know to the proverbial "T". She is more concerned with herself than with her kid. I have known kids sent to treatment centers for doing far less than what Loren has done. When Loren arrives at Camp Ascend, the story sort of begins to unravel for me. Most of the other characters are mere caricatures. The Camp itself is ludicrous, and it is simply not believable that the Colonel can be so shifty as to set up so many offshore bank accounts and elude the law for so long, yet is incapable of organizing a camp that wouldn't fool any woodchuck that happened to wander through! Bogus treatment centers abound in the real world, sometimes existing for years. Loren is not given much of a challenge, considering the nonsensical and inept management of the camp. I would have loved to have sen him a more realistic setting. It's easy to spot Liz as his future romantic interest, but even she is pretty one-dimensional. Donovan is a sadist, but a stupid and pathetic one, which takes away from Loren's mission. I don't believe that Camp Ascend would have lasted one cycle, much less the nine or so that the book mentions. I would rather have seen Loren up against some of the Treatment Centers or Boot Camps that I have read and heard of in real life. The ending seems sort of contrived, and I began skimming the last few chapters. Now, to be fair, it may be that the author is deliberately exaggerating the absurdity of the situation to make some sort of a social statement on mainstream values along the lines of, say, Animal Farm. It's not a bad book by any means, especially for teens, and I would certainly recommend it to my Young Adult patrons, which I think is the best audience for it.