Elaine Wolf - Camp

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Camp: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Every secret has a price.
For most girls, sleepaway camp is great fun. But for Amy Becker, it’s a nightmare. Amy, whose home life is in turmoil, is sent to Camp Takawanda for Girls for the first time as a teenager. Although Amy swears she hates her German-immigrant mother, who is unduly harsh with Amy’s autistic younger brother, Amy is less than thrilled about going to camp. At Takawanda she is subjected to a humiliating “initiation” and relentless bullying by the ringleader of the senior campers. As she struggles to stop the mean girls from tormenting her, Amy becomes more confident. Then a cousin reveals dark secrets about Amy’s mother’s past, which sets in motion a tragic event that changes Amy and her family forever.
Camp
Camp
Camp

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In my mind, Rory raced into the dining hall. She slammed the door to shut me out.

I wanted to tell my father what had happened that summer. But all I could say was, “It was awful. Just because Uncle Ed bought Takawanda, I shouldn’t have had to go. He didn’t have a clue about what really went on there. I’m glad he doesn’t own it anymore.”

“You know, honey, I thought I was doing the right thing then. A whole summer by a lake in Maine. A chance to be on your own for a while without worrying about your brother.”

“But if you wouldn’t have sent me, then Charlie wouldn’t have died.”

“What are you saying?”

“I never told you how Robin teased me and what she said about Mom.” My voice became a whisper. “And I never told you about the accident.”

My father sat next to me on the bed. He put his arm around me. “I think I know what happened.”

“But Mom said she didn’t tell you.”

“She didn’t. She never said a word. No one keeps secrets better than your mother.”

What secrets was he talking about? My mother and her past? Mom and Uncle Ed? Did my father know about that, I wondered for a moment, though I realized it didn’t matter anymore. Even when my mother welcomed questions, I knew not to ask about my uncle. “Certain things are meant to stay private,” Mom had whispered. Her affair with Uncle Ed was one of those things.

“But if Mom didn’t tell you about Charlie, about the accident, then how do you know?”

“It wasn’t hard to figure out, Ame. When I thought about it, I realized you and Charlie couldn’t have been playing together outside when that dog came, because if you were there when Charlie started running, you surely would have caught him.”

Tears came from a place so deep I couldn’t stop them—nor could I stop the questions that rushed from my mouth. “Why didn’t you say anything? Why didn’t we ever talk about this?”

My father pulled me to my feet and hugged me tight. “I assumed you’d talk about Charlie when you were ready.”

My words rolled out with sobs. “I killed him, Dad. I killed Charlie when I let him wander away. If I hadn’t been snooping in Mom’s things, Charlie wouldn’t have taken off. And he wouldn’t have died, Dad. He wouldn’t be dead.”

My father held me for a long time. “Amy,” he finally said, his voice shaky and soft. “Amy, I’m so very sorry. I should have talked to you about this long ago. I hope you can forgive me. Forgive me for not talking about Charlie. Forgive me for sending you to Takawanda. But more important, honey—so much more important—I hope that, someday, you’ll forgive yourself.”

I heard my mother’s voice as if she, not my father, embraced me. People don’t always do the right thing, even when they think they are. And somehow we just have to forgive them, forgive ourselves.

“Dad,” I said, before my courage faded, “why didn’t you ever tell me about Mom? Why didn’t we talk about her life in Germany? And why didn’t I know about Anna?”

My father took a step back and rested his hands on my shoulders. “Your mother’s tried so hard to shut out the past. It’s just so painful for her. And when you were born, she made me promise I wouldn’t talk about it either. She saw you as a fresh start, Ame. And she wanted to forget. She needed to forget. But she just can’t. She can’t ever forget.”

“She told me, Dad. When she was really sick, she told me about Anna.”

“It was her story to tell, honey, not mine. I’ve always respected her privacy. I just love her so much.”

I looked up and saw a tear run down my father’s cheek. “It’s okay, Dad. I understand.”

My father wrapped me in his arms again. I breathed in his aftershave, that woodsy scent of my childhood. “Your mother has spent her whole life feeling guilty about Anna—so guilty she couldn’t even talk about her. I’m glad you can talk about Charlie now. You were a wonderful sister to him. He was so lucky to have you. So please, honey, please don’t repeat your mother’s mistake. You’ve got your whole life in front of you. Don’t waste it feeling guilty. All your mother and I want is for you to be happy.”

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Sometimes in my dreams, Charlie gives me lovely things: building blocks and endless hugs.

And sometimes I dream about Takawanda: Rory at the social, Erin in the boathouse, Andy at the bus.

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Maybe in college I’ll face other Rorys. I know I’ll stand tall and speak up without fear.

I wonder what happened to her after that summer. Did her father continue to abuse her? Erin wasn’t sure he ever really did. But if it was true, then I hope he finally stopped.

The few times I saw cousin Robin after camp, we didn’t talk about Rory. And my father quit talking about Uncle Ed all the time. Dad’s angry with him, I know, because Uncle Ed rarely called when Mom was sick.

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Maybe in college I’ll meet other Erins. I want to stay true, to be a better friend than I was to Erin Hollander.

Last week, while shopping with new friends, I bought three cards. It’s been a long time , they say on the front. And inside: Better late than never. I sent them off this morning, with notes of apology. I don’t expect Erin and Donnie and Andy to write back. But they each deserve an explanation and long-overdue thanks.

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Lately in my dreams, Erin and I walk on a path through the pines—my arm around her waist, her arm around mine. We walk and we walk. And the path doesn’t end. And we don’t look for Rory. We don’t even talk. And when I wake up, I know I’ve been smiling.

Mostly, though, I dream about my mother. I picture her stories. I see myself sitting next to her. She squeezes my hand. She tells me she loves me.

Yes, Dad is right: My mother is proud.

College, here I come.

A Note from the Author

Dear Reader,

I hope you enjoyed Camp , and that it was hard for you to put it down. Sometimes when I read a novel that’s hard for me to put down, I wonder if the main character resembles the author and how much of the story actually happened in real life. So in case you’re wondering, I thought I’d tell you a little about myself and some of the similarities and differences between me and Amy Becker.

Unlike Amy, I loved sleepaway camp. I could hardly wait for summer so I could go back to Camp Truda for Girls in Maine. Truda was owned by my uncle, as the fictional Takawanda is owned by Amy’s uncle. But my uncle ran a terrific camp, where the rules were strictly enforced—and I was scared to break them. I did, however, once sneak out with my friends to trek through the woods to the nearest boys camp. And much to my distress, my uncle did report that to my father.

Takawanda looks just like I remember Truda. That’s one of their few similarities. Both camps—the one I created and the one in my memory—are hauntingly beautiful. Years before I wrote this novel, I knew that a sleepaway camp would be the perfect setting for a coming-of-age story.

Just as camp was the most comfortable place for me, coming-of-age novels were the most comfortable books for me— and they still are. I think some part of me is stuck in the teenage years. Psychologists would probably say I have “unresolved issues.” But I think I’m stuck here because I’ve always been involved with teenagers—as a camp counselor, a recreation leader, a special education teacher, a reading teacher, a writers’ workshop facilitator, a judge for young authors’ contests, and as a public school district chairperson for English language arts.

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