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Camp Nurse: My Adventures at Summer Camp

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The bestselling, critically acclaimed author of A Nurse’s Story and The Making of a Nurse is back to describe her experiences as a summer camp nurse.

After years of working in intensive care units caring for critically ill people, nurse Tilda Shalof now turns her attention to healthy patients — the kids at summer camp. In this reminiscence of six summers at a variety of camps, Shalof opens a window into the world that is a utopia for the vast majority of children, the proverbial “happy campers,” but sometimes also a place of intense misery for a few.

Throughout the summers, as kids troop through the infirmary with a variety of ordinary — as well as some quite extraordinary — complaints, Shalof describes how she assesses, diagnoses, and treats them all, from pesky lice infestations and scratchy bug bites, to broken arms and severe accidents. But Shalof finds that more often than not, she is treating the psychological maladies. She befriends kids from families going through bitter divorces, girls with eating disorders, a camper who attempts suicide in a desperate plea to be sent home, a teenager grieving the recent death of his father. Whatever the problem or concern, it is to the camp nurse that kids — and counsellors — go for help.

These anecdotes are told in a light-hearted tone, full of good humour and lots of laughs. Shalof’s stories are wildly entertaining and will satisfy the twinges of nostalgia every parent feels when sending their kids away to camp.

296 pages, Hardcover

First published March 31, 2009

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Tilda Shalof

13 books56 followers

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5 stars
43 (27%)
4 stars
70 (44%)
3 stars
33 (21%)
2 stars
6 (3%)
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4 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Rachel Dick Plonka.
186 reviews15 followers
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August 31, 2025
I worked as a camp nurse and this was the most accurate and hilarious description of the experience. a heartwarming and brutally honest read!
Profile Image for Jacob.
92 reviews21 followers
July 9, 2013
This woman is a liar.

How do I know? I attended and currently work at the first camp she describes in her book. Not only is everything she writes either a fantastical exaggeration or an outright lie she also has the gall to paint herself as the hero of the story.

Here's what actually happened, as best as I can remember: She arrived totally unprepared for the task at hand. Any time a kid had a problem she would freak out, completely unable to deal with it. This culminated in a memorable instance in which she locked herself in her office and cried when a kid came to her with a fairly basic issue.

She then left the camp only halfway through the session leaving all the kids with zero medical support. It was one of the most irresponsible things I've ever heard of a "medical professional" doing. If memory serves, a former friend of hers (a far more qualified nurse who has worked at the camp for many, many years) had to be called in to finish the job.

She was the worst nurse we ever had, bar none. Only read this book if you're interested in understanding the sorts of mental gymnastics a pathological liar can do.
Profile Image for Lila.
11 reviews
January 1, 2024
As a former camper and current nursing student, I expected this book to be both nostalgic and informative. It was both of those, but most of all, it was entertaining and funny, a mostly light read that I finished in a matter of days. The description of the first camp she worked at felt a little exaggerated at times, and I enjoyed the chapters detailing the second two camps much more. I can't say it made me want to be a camp nurse, but it did make me think about the nuances of working with teenagers...and it made me laugh!
Profile Image for Jess Van Dyne-Evans .
306 reviews11 followers
September 27, 2017
I just didn’t find this funny. And the author has a real talent for throwing herself into weird situations - she’s straight laced and detail orientated and yet signs herself up for a hippie camp, then bombs straight off for a much more regimented camp run for new age children, where she finds plenty of details. Unfortunately, new age kids mean new age remedies, which she goes on for pages about....
Profile Image for Laura.
3,860 reviews
September 27, 2022
I loved this book about camp nursing. She has such a great narrative that is informative and funny and yet respectful. I am glad I did not read this book prior to my first camp nurse stint otherwise I would have been so anxious. I loved how she went over the three different camps she worked at. inspired me to go back for another summer.
Profile Image for Sarah Ortinau.
230 reviews3 followers
May 8, 2020
So I’m convinced I could be a better camp nurse and I just have basic first aid. Seriously, it took her till her second summer to learn the RICE method? Ohhh nooo.
Profile Image for Kristin.
1,023 reviews9 followers
May 30, 2011
I picked this book up at a used book store over the weekend and it was the perfect accompaniment to the unofficial beginning to Summer 2011.
Shalof excellently compares and contrasts her experiences of the 3 camps where she served as 'Camp Nurse' to date. As she says while searching for the 3rd camp, it was a 'Goldilocks' experience. She first serves the role at an ultra-liberal 'youth revolution' camp for one season then goes to a more structured camp that caters to the elite but has too much of a 'country club' feel fo Shalouf's tastes. Finally she ends up at a Jewish-centric camp, which she'd been avoiding due to her lack of active practice of her religion but chose almost by default when she couldn't find a suitable alternative camp for her sons that would entertain them but be like neither of her first two experiences.
The situations she faced as camp nurse ranged from as simple to treat as letting a kid cool off by sleeping in the air conditioned first-aid center to burns and broken bones requiring immediate attention at a hospital in town. Add into the mix homesickness experienced by children of all ages and the fact that camp often brings out the emergence of sexual knowledge and experience, and Shalof sees a broad cross-section of the youth of today.
There are also personal battles that Shalof delves into in this book. Shalof never went to camp as a kid, so when her sons were old enough for camp, she wanted to make sure they didn't miss out, and potentially realize her own dream of doing camp, even if as the nurse and not as a camper. As one of the oldest people at the first two camps, she never feels truly integrated into camp life and leaves both after her scheduled time feeling unfufilled and unsure if she was meant to do this. Also, seeing how some of the parent-child relationships seemed to have reached a truly dysfunctional state, she tries to keep an eye on her own kids despite knowing they neither want nor need mom's supervision.
All in all a great book, though I found that she focused a lot on those first two camps, and while giving equal time to the 3rd camp, it wasn't proportional to the time she spent there. Definitely the perfect early summer read.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,500 reviews26 followers
February 10, 2015
Actual Rating is 1.5 , but I didn't want to put a 1 and bring down her rating just because I didn't 'feel' it.

Most people seemed to really like this book. So I thought it would be an excellent reading, like Erma Bombeck's books, full of funny short stories centering around a particular subject. In this case it was being a camp nurse. Only I didn't find it too amusing or engaging. In fact, the first couple of pages had me frowning.

Maybe my parents were old fashioned, but when they hauled me about the country I didn't get gadgets to occupy my mind. I was told to look out the window and enjoy the scenery. Even now when being hauled about the place by them or anyone else, even with a phone in my pocket and an ipod on my lap, I still enjoy staring out the window as the world whips by. Shalof has places her kids in the back of her vehicle steadfast in ignoring her as she tells them to take in the view and breathe the fresh air because or their electronic gaming devices. Perhaps that's the way of the world, but really...

Anyhow, the start obviously annoyed me and just kept going by calling the campy director a young man who looked like an acne faced teenager, but I decided to reserve judgment and give the book a proper go. After all, it was supposed to be good and it IS Canadian. So I did continue to slug my way through it, but maybe it's because I only ever went to one summer camp in my childhood and absolutely hated it, but this book just didn't do it for me. It was pretty much just a bunch of stories about a nurse treating everything from homesickness to heat stroke to broken bones while lamenting about how her kids are growing up and her son is becoming popular with the girls. All while hopping a total of 3 camps until she finds the one that loosely suits her religion, age, and temperament.

The Short of It

While I did not enjoy the book I'm pretty sure I might know at least one person who would, simply because it would probably remind her of her own camp nurse experiences.

This book would probably do well with an older age group than my own...people with kids...nurses, etc.

Unfortunately it did not go over well with me, but it was still a decent book that I'm sure other people will love.
Profile Image for Adrienne.
232 reviews80 followers
June 15, 2011
I've already been laughing out loud at page 50.

My second favourite book of Tilda's, after A Nurse's Story. And I can say that conclusively as I have read all of her books, even the latest. As always I love her stories and motherly nature, her honesty and keen observations, the way she brings all her experiences into the larger picture of nursing care and how it can improve. As I am about to enter nursing school this fall, Tilda excited me once again about my chosen career and got me all revved up to begin.

Read this book in the spring or summer. It's a perfect book for sitting on your lawn and imagining yourself at the cottage. The sounds of children and nature come alive while Tilda will regal you her experiences at several very different summer camps for children. You will feel like you are there, you will wish your kids could be there, you will see what true compassion is.
Profile Image for Cat.
305 reviews
January 14, 2011
I enjoyed this book for a change. I picked it up after reading a blurb form it in a magazine. It was interesting to read about how many different camps there are out there. It is a Canadian book too so that helped. I went to camp as a child so I related to alot of it. I liked that she didnt warm up to camp right away until she found the right one. The first two sounded pretty horrendous to me. Anyway, it was a good read and well written. Her kids growing up so fast and finding out that her little boy was popular with the girls made me sad and terrified that this will come all too soon for me and my own boys. But it is unavoidable I imagine. I would read another book by this author.
8 reviews4 followers
April 9, 2010
I read this memoir for work, not expecting that it would be of much interest to someone who wasn't a nurse. How wrong I was. It's just lovely. Amusing, sweet, a great read for anyone who went to camp as a kid or for a parent who'll be sending her child to camp (in fact, a must read for anyone sending a kid off for the summer). It really gives you some insight into the different types of camp as well as what it's like to run an infirmary (kids have so many maladies—the meds they bring with them to camp is unbelievable).
1,178 reviews14 followers
August 21, 2016
Accepting a position at Camp Na-Gee-La in Northern Ontario put all of Nurse Tilda skills to work as she deals with homesickness, injuries, bug bites, lice, and viral outbreaks that make food poisoning a preferable option. There are humorous situations shared through anecdotal stories along with the seriousness of children on the brink of adulthood mingling with members of the opposite gender. In general, it portrays a realistic description of the multitude of situations that one would expect at a camp for teenagers run by young adults.
Profile Image for Amy Joy.
5 reviews1 follower
December 1, 2015
Three stars may be generous for this book. I feel she may have exaggerated a lot of situations for the sake of sensationalism. It was an entertaining read, but with so many amazing books out there why waste your time?
Profile Image for Sara.
44 reviews1 follower
August 7, 2012
I was a camp nurse last summer and bought this to see what I was getting myself into. Some of her stories are heartbreaking and others are too outrageous to believe! Enjoyed reading it though.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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