Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Jefferson Branch Library | Book | 39009066242765 | YA FIC HARTL,S | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
When CeCe's born-again ex-boyfriend dumps her after they have sex, she follows him to Jesus camp in order to win him back. Problem: She knows nothing about Jesus. But her best friend Paul does. He accompanies CeCe to camp, and the plan--God's or CeCe's--goes immediately awry when her ex shows up with a new girlfriend, a True Believer at that.Scrambling to save face, CeCe ropes Paul into faking a relationship. But as deceptions stack up, she questions whether her ex is really the nice guy he seemed. And what about her strange new feelings for Paul--is this love, lust, or an illusion born of heartbreak? To figure it out, she'll have to confront the reasons she chased her ex to camp in the first place, including the truth about the night she lost her virginity.
Author Notes
Sonia Hartl is a YA author and a reader of anything she can get her hands on: books, cereal boxes, bumper stickers. She's a member of SCBWI and the communications director for Pitch Wars. She has been published in The Writers Post Journal and Boston Literary Magazine. She lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan with her husband and two daughters. Follow her on Twitter @SoniaHartl1.
Reviews (4)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up--Francine "CeCe" Wells plans to spend three weeks in the summer before her senior year of high school at Camp Three SixTeen, a Christian camp for teens. As a non-Christian, CeCe is spending her parents' budgeted funds to try to win back Ethan, after he talked her into having sex then broke up with her to restore his virginity and virtue. On the positive side, at least she'll be earning community service hours and won't be alone. Her next door neighbor and best friend, Paul, who is not a fan of Ethan, tags along with CeCe, also claiming to be a Christian, despite hard feelings stemming from his ultra-religious pastor father leaving their family years ago. Upon arrival, CeCe finds that Ethan is already in a relationship with Mandy, one of the girls in her cabin. To try to make Ethan jealous and save face, she and Paul start a fake relationship. Camp Three SixTeen is no match for CeCe as she boldly resists the female body shaming and negativity surrounding sex. While CeCe and Paul test the rocky waters of their new relationship, CeCe forms strong friendship bonds with Mandy, Sarina, and Astrid, the girls of Cabin 8. Recommended for purchase for older teens, due to heavy themes of sex. VERDICT Readers will enjoy this quick-paced, well written friends-to-lovers romance taking place during an atypical summer camp experience, complete with pranks, hilarious banter, and teenage angst.--Laura Jones, Argos Community Schools, IN
Publisher's Weekly Review
Just after junior Francine "CeCe" Wells's first sexual experience, her boyfriend, Ethan, breaks up with her and announces that he is headed to Christian-focused Camp Three SixTeen to restore his virginity. Desperate to hold onto Ethan, CeCe enrolls at the three-week camp, too, even though she's not a Christian and doesn't plan to become one. CeCe's best friend and next-door neighbor, Paul, a veteran of the camp, offers to join impulsive CeCe to help keep her out of trouble. Focused on winning Ethan back, CeCe begins camp grappling with insecurities about her worth. But continual support from Paul and her three female cabinmates--who model acceptance, friendship, and love--open her mind to the rewards of compassion and what it means to truly care for others. Writing in CeCe's acerbic voice, debut author Hartl talks frankly about teen sexual experiences and her protagonist's initial cynicism about religion: "I may have lacked Christian prowess, but at least I knew enough not to talk about hand jobs in the Jesus camp van." Bitingly funny, this first novel promotes positive and salient themes of love, consent, female empowerment, and accountability. Ages 14--up. Agent: Rebecca Podos, Reese Agency. (Sept.)
Kirkus Review
When CeCe gets dumped by her boyfriend, Ethan, soon after she loses her virginity to him, purportedly because of his religious-based guilt, she follows him to a Christian summer camp to win him back.Her best friend, Paul, who attended the camp in his Christian days (before his pastor father left his mom for the church secretary), goes along to support her. When Ethan turns out to be dating one of the other campers, CeCe pretends Paul is actually her boyfriend, though she still wants Ethan back. Told from CeCe's first-person, non-Christian point of view, the story starts out frothy, with condom water balloons and plot manipulations to get CeCe and her new white (everyone seems to be white, a missed opportunity) counselor-in-training friends to the point where they're discussing sex more than Jesus. CeCe's infatuation with Ethan doesn't make sense at first, and the Christian camp setting doesn't fully ring true, until suddenly Paul asks CeCe, "Did you say no before you said yes?" Ethan tells the entire camp that CeCe deceived and seduced him, and from there the novel blossomsyes, blossomsinto a thoughtful story of consent, sexual education, friendship, and honest communication. For all the talk about Christ, there isn't much religion here, but there's a lot of truth and some genuine goodness, as CeCe and her friends learn that their virginity, or lack thereof, doesn't define them.Recommended for teens no matter what they believe.(Fiction. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
After CeCe gave her virginity to boyfriend Ethan, he dumped her so he could get right with Jesus. Still smitten, CeCe follows him to a religious summer camp and pretends to be seeking Christianity to win him back. She drags along her charming best friend, Paul, and designates him her pretend boyfriend as cover. CeCe's witty first-person narrative veers between caustic (mostly caustic) and curious about Christianity, and, though she disdains religion, she comes to appreciate, even love, her three religious roommates. The book slightly veers when CeCe, the only one who's had sex, becomes the camp's reluctant and sometimes preachy (pun intended) teacher. Since her first and only time was bad, she decides to try it with Paul in a detailed sex scene, and, as readers likely guessed, the two have loved each other all along. Although some will bristle at CeCe's attitude toward Christianity, the book's strengths lie in how it thoughtfully and matter-of-factly explores teen sexuality and the way it pushes the message that no means means no.--Ilene Cooper Copyright 2019 Booklist