Fired from her fancy designer job in NYC and with her personal life in shambles, Gigi (real name: Georgica) applies for, and gets, a counselor job at Camp Chinooka, the place she spent many happy summers as a child/tween. Is she just escaping her problems or will she have to face them? Since books generally need plots, I think you know the answer.
Oyy.
I'd been looking for a summer camp book, so when I stumbled onto One S'More Summer, it seemed like serendipity. I was SO there for it... until I actually started reading it.
First of all, a good portion of the book, especially at the beginning, are flashbacks/explanations as to how Gigi ended up where she did. Which, ok, I guess we needed those to figure out what's going on, but I was here for the camp experience, damn it, not another chick-lit about a NYC-er's (loss of a) high-flyer life.
Then there was Gigi's relationship with Perry, another counselor, which, for the most part, consisted of her being offended at everything he said and being nasty to him in return. And, look, I'm ALL for slap-slap-kiss relationships (Beatrice/Benedick, House/Cuddy, Elizabeth/Darcy, you name it), but this was all just so damn unmotivated. Nothing Perry did ever warranted the kind of reactions he got from Gigi, and she came across all the more badly for it.
To add to all that, most of the book just fell... flat. It was written decently enough, so I can't quite put my finger on why, but it seemed to tell rather than show most of the time. For example, Gigi kept telling everyone who'll listen about how affected she is by spending the summer at the same camp she, Alicia and Josh used to attend (which... if you're trying to run away from people, why go to the place you shared exclusively with them?!), but you don't really see her experience this. Past events are mentioned matter-of-factly and present events don't really connect to them. Most of the events/subplots are like that. Described well enough, but no sloppy joes meat.
All in all just... unsatisfactory.
Minor annoyance in the grand scheme of things: the insistence on calling the other guy 'Joshua'. So pretentious.