Our summer camp marathon continues with a trip to Mr. Stine. Since it is one of his, it is one I can review. And I will very much do so, meaning I can't really say that much here so this will be short. No idea when I'll get to it though.
This is a stand alone YA book that is the same publisher as Fear Street but again is a stand alone. Not sure why, I assume either A. Stine didn't wanna break the rules and go outside of Shadyside yet or B. the publisher thought it wasn't fit for the series. I wouldn't blame them if it was the latter.
This is set at a theater camp, with a girl Rena having been forced into going there by her friend, as she deals with some trauma from 3 years ago. Accident start up and they have to find out whodunnut. This was honestly quite good, I'll have a lot to say when I fully get to it someday.
It's a well built mystery where each suspect makes sense and it can be about anyone. The person it is makes sense and while they gotta cheat a tad to do it, it works and their motivation ties into the story well. And spoilers, the asshole boyfriend doesn't end up with her, thank god.
The camp part isn't quite used super well aside from a few nice moments of them walking around but the theater part is good. We got this diva Hedy and camp director guy who is very theatrical. There's fun stuff there.
Although I wouldn't call this a "fun" one generally, as it gets into some surprisingly serious subject matter and actually pulls it off. We explore what Rena is going through and why, and we get mental health type stuff treated with more tact than usual. Especially regarding the true events that went down in her past and how it ties into the villain.
It's effectively done and I'm surprised Stine did it and pulled it off. It's not perfectly done per say, I'll get it someday but there is one aspect I'm not totally sure of even if it wasn't poorly intentioned. As usual there's a few side things that could have been tied up, the ending and climax are a bit rushed but the ending caps off the main arc well.
It's not the most fun read I've seen from Stine but it's one of his more complex stories. More proof that he weirdly can pull off these more nuanced emotions. It's not perfect by any means but it is pretty solid so if you want a more serious tale, this is a good one. I'd rate is a a like 3.75, almost higher but still quite good.
It also has a section scrutinizing the Stanley Kubrik method of getting good performances out of actors, so that's a win. Actually, this is another Fright Camp in that regard when you get down to it lol. It's also better than Lights Out.
That does it for this one, hopefully I'll get to have more detail and not be as serious for next week's camp book. Next time, we get that with a cutesy looking book I had never heard of. See ya then.
POP CULTURE WATCH; Michelle Pfiffer, Cher, Cat on a hot tin roof, Tennessee Williams, Keds, Matt Dillon, Mickey & Minnie Mouse, The Godfather, Benetton sweater, Norman Rockwell, National Geographic, Rice Krispies, Coke, King Lear.
RED HEAD WATCH: Hedy, Chip.
ANIMAL DEATH WATCH: Yes, a swan. Yeah.
STINE-ISMS: O of surprise, tried to scream but no sound came out. That's shockingly it.