The camp that Mindy goes to is not what she expected and does not fit the hyped up description AT ALL. But still, somehow, it brought together youth in such a way that they are forever changed and wish others could have shared the experience. Being a 70s kid myself, who never went to camp, I found the pre-teen details to be right on target and so hilarious. Mindy's voice is great and this is a quick, fun read. I like this gem of wisdom toward the end of the book about the camp owner, Saul:
"I think some people viewed Saul as the ultimate con man, the lying, scheming owner of a broken-down, worthless mosquito-infested camp who cheated unwitting parents out of their money. Others, meanwhile, saw him as a dedicated and exceptional social worker, a man with the capacity to gather up a campful of outcasts with nowhere to go and make them all feel like winners, a man who so believed in his own lies that he somehow turned them into reality. And some people, me included now, saw him as a little bit of both."