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* [http://www.toddstrasser.com/html/bootcamp.htm Description from Strasser's website]
* [http://www.toddstrasser.com/html/bootcamp.htm Description from Strasser's website]
* [http://toddstrasser.com/wordpress Todd Strasser's website]
* [http://toddstrasser.com/wordpress Todd Strasser's website]
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[[Category:2007 novels]]
[[Category:2007 novels]]

Revision as of 13:28, 22 July 2015

Boot Camp
GenreYoung adult novel
PublisherSimon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Publication date
02 May 2007 (1st edition)
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages235 (Hardcover edition)
ISBNISBN 1-4169-0848-X Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character

Boot Camp is a young adult novel by Todd Strasser about a boy who is subjected to physical and psychological abuse when his parents send him to a boot camp.

Plot

A fifteen-year-old boy named Garett is picked up by a pair of bounty hunters and sent to a boot camp in upstate New York called Lake Harmony. Upon his arrival, he learns that his parents have sent him to the facility because he refused to stop having intimate relationships with his former math teacher, Sabrina, along with other things including staying out too late, and smoking cannabis. Connor is an incredibly bright and clever kid. His parents are at most, distant. Connor does not believe he belongs at Lake Harmony, but he is not allowed to leave until he has admitted his "mistakes" and conforms to the facility's standards of behavior. Staff members are authorized to use "any force necessary" to alter his behavior, including physical and psychological abuse.

After attempting to talk his way out with no success, he realizes escape is his only option. He escapes Lake Harmony with two friends, Pauly and Sarah, after using chemicals to start a fire. They reach the Canadian border to escape from legal recapture, and their pursuers' boat begins to sink. He lets his friends out on the other side of the border, and then rescues his pursuers, who bring him back to Lake Harmony, where he is beaten senseless repeatedly. The director announces that all campers are being demoted, based on the privilege system they use, and to blame Connor, so he is beaten yet again by the campers. Ultimately, he is "reformed". He begins to believe in the treatment, feeling no remorse when those around him are abused. When his mother comes to pick him up with an investigator, the investigator asks if he was beaten. He breaks down and says that he was, but is still scared of what Lake Harmony would do to him. This forced him to say that he deserved all of it, since the director was standing there. It is possible that these events caused him to suffer from PTSD, as he appears to suffer from a mental breakdown when admitting what has occurred.

Awards and nominations

  • American Library Association Quick Pick for Reluctant Readers[1]
  • Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers[2]
  • New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age[3]
  • Abraham Lincoln Illinois High School Book Award[4]

References

External links