Lucas just lost his soldier dad to a battle overseas. His grandparents decide it would be good for him to go to Camp Kawani, a couple mountains over, for kids dealing with such a loss. Lucas doesn't feel like going, especially no that Gramps signed away their mountain to the mining company, but go he must. He quickly finds friendship with two other boys, Alex and George, mostly due to all of them being the brunts for the bullying of another kid, Zach. While on a hike, the kids watch the camp counsellors drive some treasure hunters off the camp lands. Later that night, the counsellors explain the legend of the treasure of Thomas Jefferson Beale, which is thought to be buried in the nearby hills. The counsellors make the kids promise to not go off treasure hunting, but when Lucas sees a cave on their overnight hike later he convinces Alex and George to quickly check it out. They're sure they can rejoin the others without problem, but they get lost. As they use Lucas' knowledge of the mountains to try and get them back to civilization, they run into a big clue about the real location of the treasure.
I really don't know why Oechsle made the camp a place for kids who were grieving. I think he should've just made it a general summer camp. Grief is never addressed by the camp program, in fact, it seems that all the campers know why they're there but most refuse to talk about it. And that's just ridiculous. If you really had a camp for kids who'd lost a parent, there would be some kind of program to help them deal with the grief or there'd be no point to the camp. Anyway, the camp did a lousy job of doing what it was supposed to do, but it did provide a great backdrop for kids to get lost in the woods and go on a treasure hunt for a real legendary treasure. (Thomas Jefferson Beale's clues are historic and real. Whether his treasure is...that's up for debate. No one is really known to have cracked the first code or found any treasure.) Up until Lucas, Alex, and George get lost the book is full of boys playing camp pranks, not listening to adults well, and not dealing with emotions well. But once they are in survival mode the book gets fun. I was pleasantly surprised by the hermit character's development. And I found the finding of the treasure plausible. So in other words, I loved the treasure hunt parts of this and could do without the camp parts (or believe the camp parts could have been done much better if the camp did what it was supposed to do). Hand this one to kids who like plausible treasure hunts and codes (the Thomas Jefferson Beale codes are included the back of the book for kids who want a crack at 'em).
Notes on content: No language issues that I remember. No sexual content. Some bullying the kids take into their own hands to solve (though it's clear it would've been better if they'd trusted the adults). One broken ankle and one poisonous snake bite.