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Barbara Kay tells her friend, Nancy, the good news - that she can go to camp, and the bad news - that she may not go to Eastpointe High with her. She doesn't know why. Nancy guesses that it is because she can't always be counted on. The girls shop for camp clothes. Barbara spots a carnival and gambles the money that should have been spent for camp treats. To earn money for camp, she takes cousin Teddy to a magic show. She decides being responsible is no fun. The girls are taken to camp and meet their cabin mates. They become guides for a Cambodian girl, Tran Duc. She gets a hit playing…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Barbara Kay tells her friend, Nancy, the good news - that she can go to camp, and the bad news - that she may not go to Eastpointe High with her. She doesn't know why. Nancy guesses that it is because she can't always be counted on. The girls shop for camp clothes. Barbara spots a carnival and gambles the money that should have been spent for camp treats. To earn money for camp, she takes cousin Teddy to a magic show. She decides being responsible is no fun. The girls are taken to camp and meet their cabin mates. They become guides for a Cambodian girl, Tran Duc. She gets a hit playing baseball, and the girls scream, "Run." She does; she runs and hides. Barbara is commended because she runs for adult help in the situation. Denise pushes Barbara in at swimming test time. Barbara gets angry because she can't swim. Counselor, Ms. Pearl counsels her, "Every person you meet and every situation has a lesson you can choose to learn, or not." Barbara helps a messy campmate, and she begins to understand how her mother feels when she does not take care of her belongings. Barbara and Karen arrange to trade jobs. Barbara forgets. Both are restricted, and have to write notes about what they should have done differently. Barbara finally writes that she learned she must keep her promises. During a scavenger hunt, Tran Duc is injured far from camp. Barbara shows her ability to act responsibly by using her compass to take a shortcut back to camp for help. The night of the last campfire she is given a surprise honor. She ignores a deadline for packing her bedroll. While laboriously toting her pack to the parking lot, she thinks about how learning to be dependable is kind of a zigzag path. Do you think that people are going to be able to depend on Barbara in the future? More importantly, do you think she will be able to depend on herself?
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Autorenporträt
Patricia Topp, a resident of Michigan, received her M.A. in Education from Wayne State University and taught grade school for thirty-two years. She also tutored adult illiterates. She began writing after retirement. Her interest in science led her to write This Strange Quantum World and You. Call Him Father Nature: The Story of John Muir came out of her interest on conservation. These children's books are available from Blue Dolphin Publishing.