Fat Camp shows the struggles of a teenager overweight girl. Being an overweight teenager must be no doubt very hard at a time when the insecurities are at their best. It seems that Cam, the main character is dealing with her insecurities by showing a tomboy type of behavior and denying her feminity, (it seems to me) as a defense mechanism. The "I say it so you don't have to say it" auto-irony is sometimes too much, and not even funny:
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Now, though, I am about to do the kind of rowing that was popular on slave ships, assuming that I can manage to step into the boat without tipping it over. To his credit, Rick, the rowing counselor, doesn’t laugh or make any of us feel like the pack of elephants we must appear to be.
Cam shows interest in 'hotties', usually fit boys from the silver screen industry, although she blames people who do this, she is very much attracted to appearances, not only in people, but also we find a lot of 'product placement' in the book.
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"So it’s ten o’clock at night, and I’m already in my Victoria’s Secret PINK nightshirt, getting into my bed, when I am summoned and have to drag ass to the phone", ", a black Mercedes SUV screeches up and a girl who doesn’t look to me as though she has to lose anything but some of the contents of her overstuffed Marc Jacobs bag gets out of the front seat and dashes up to us", "and because their personal trainer is obsessed with “hydration,” and now they are buying designer water the way normal families buy juice packs. I take the shopping bag filled with Fiji bottles and try to wedge them into my already bursting backpack. Is there really a difference between Fiji and, say, Dasani? My mom swears there is. The only thing that I like better about Fiji is the way they decorate the bottles."
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There are a few kids here who are seriously overweight—like over 300 pounds—and whether we admit it or not, none of us wants to look like them and we don’t go out of our way to be their friends. It doesn’t matter who they are inside, we fixate on their size, and first impressions die hard.
Serious issues as eating disorders are put in question, there is also a love story, but I don't think this book has something authentic, not credible pain, not credible joy... it did't convinced me at all, and it sounds like a cheap metro book. Not a fan!