I think the characters were the worst part of the book, since Night Owls and Summer Skies might’ve stood a chance if Sullivan sold us on Emma’s mom. One part I did enjoy was near the ending, when Emma finally tells her mom off. There were also some odd discrepancies-Camp Mapplewood was both a great camp people wanted to be at and desperately trying to stay afloat. Lots of hanging out, Emma and other characters having flat or forced interactions, or romantic scenes with a lot of telling over showing-Emma and Vivian felt forced. Not only is Vivian “in charge” of Emma, but often manipulates things behind her back to keep her at camp. As in, maybe Vivian was seventeen and a new counsellor and Emma was sixteen and old for a camper. When I read the blurb about a camper falling for a counselor, I guess I assumed the best. Which is such a feeble excuse, I mean, what did Emma think would happen once she got kicked out and her mother-now on the other side of the world-can’t pick her up? They’ll call the next available legal guardian. All she would have to say is, “Sir, my father won’t know where I am if anything happens, could you call this number and update him?” But she doesn’t, because she doesn’t want to “bug” her equally stupidly, ridiculously, unrealistically nice dad. She can call her dad at any time: not only does she steal her cell phone back, but the people running the camp are stupidly, ridiculously, unrealistically nice. What’s difficult to wrap my head around is that Emma detests Camp Mapplewood so much but goes through such a roundabout way of leaving through being kicked out. Emma’s PTSD is from… being stuck in a tree for a night? That’s the root of her trauma and a part of her depression? Really? In nearly eighteen years, the worst things to happen to Emma are a divorce and being stuck in a tree? Okay, sure, whatever. (Yes really.) Emma devises plan after plan to get kicked out of camp, but gorgeous camp counselor Vivian keeps forgiving Emma and hiding her messes.įirst: the goddamn mental gymnastics necessary to accept the set-up. Things take a turn for the worse when five seconds after arriving, her mother ditches her at Camp Mapplewood (yes really) to go on a cruise-the same camp which left her with PTSD. Emma’s mother is self-involved, flaky and distracted, so Emma doesn’t plan for a good time. Night Owls and Summer Skies has an okay concept but suffers from bad characters, plotting, prose-bad everything.Īs per her custody agreement, Emma must spend summers with her estranged mother. – Set-up requires some serious mental gymnastics ![]() – Plotting somehow manages to be both messy and simplistic ![]() ![]() – The colour palette on the cover is SO GOOD Casual homophobia, bullying, ignoring boundaries in a casual setting, lack of consent in a casual setting, underage drinking.
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