
A parent should reach for this book when their teenager is navigating the dual transition of personal loss and a significant shift in their social landscape, such as leaving for a residential program or starting a new school year. The story follows Gloria, a gifted student attending a summer camp in Kentucky while privately mourning her grandmother. It beautifully explores the tension between honoring one's past and embracing a new, independent future. Parents will appreciate the thoughtful handling of complex social dynamics, including political differences with roommates and the vulnerability of new romance. It is a sophisticated coming-of-age story that offers comfort and validation for teens who feel like they are balancing a heavy heart with the pressure to excel.
Significant focus on the protagonist's grief following the death of her grandmother.
The treatment of grief is direct and secular, focusing on the internal landscape of memory and the physical absence of a loved one. The book also touches on socio-political friction regarding mountaintop removal mining, handled through realistic dialogue rather than moralizing. The resolution is hopeful but grounded in the reality that grief does not simply vanish.
A high school student who identifies as a 'thinker' or 'creative' and is currently experiencing their first major brush with grief. It is perfect for the teen who feels they have to perform 'intelligence' while feeling emotionally fragile.
This is a safe read-cold book, though parents may want to be ready to discuss the environmental politics mentioned if their teen is unfamiliar with Appalachian mining issues. A parent might see their teen becoming increasingly withdrawn or cynical after a loss, or perhaps expressing anxiety about fitting into a high-pressure academic environment.
Younger teens (12-14) will focus on the camp atmosphere and the 'will-they-won't-they' romance. Older teens (15-18) will better appreciate the nuances of Gloria's grief and the intellectual challenges presented in her writing class.
Unlike many camp books that rely on slapstick humor, this is a literary, atmospheric piece that treats the intellectual lives of teenagers with profound respect.
Gloria spends the summer before her senior year at a Governor's School for gifted students in Kentucky. While she is there to study writing, she is also processing the recent death of her beloved grandmother. The narrative follows her as she navigates a roommate with very different political views, a mysterious teacher who leaves breadcrumb clues for his students, and a developing relationship with a boy named Mason who challenges her initial judgments. It is a quiet, atmospheric exploration of intellectual and emotional awakening.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.
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