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Kay and Tom, who are both 18, meet on a coach taking 30 young adult children of diplomats working in the USA to a camp in the NY Finger Lakes. Kay is a Canadian Mohawk. Her mother works at the United Nations. Tom's father is the Kenyan ambassador to Washington. With four others they are assigned a hut for the girls, and a tent for the boys. There they chop wood, spear fish, debate and sing round the camp fire. Kay tweets her friend Suzy about all that is going on. Another camper is a Saudi prince. Tom and Mohammed have been going to school at Eton College in England. Mohammed's expensive…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Kay and Tom, who are both 18, meet on a coach taking 30 young adult children of diplomats working in the USA to a camp in the NY Finger Lakes. Kay is a Canadian Mohawk. Her mother works at the United Nations. Tom's father is the Kenyan ambassador to Washington. With four others they are assigned a hut for the girls, and a tent for the boys. There they chop wood, spear fish, debate and sing round the camp fire. Kay tweets her friend Suzy about all that is going on. Another camper is a Saudi prince. Tom and Mohammed have been going to school at Eton College in England. Mohammed's expensive dagger is missing and Tom is accused of stealing it. The prince has an FBI guard because of a threat that he will be taken hostage. Kay and Tom share musical tastes. They play for each other and are quickly falling in love. Then, when out for a walk, men with guns mistake Tom for the prince and take them prisoner. Fortunately, Kay has brought her tweeter with her. (Some sex talk, not erotic: Multicultural)
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Autorenporträt
The Rev. Peter Watson Jenkins, the son of a Methodist minister, was raised in Bath, England. After training as a school teacher and then doing hospital work as a conscientious objector, he attended Cambridge University to read theology and to train for the Congregational ministry. He was ordained in 1963 and served six parishes in Britain and America. From 1966-69 he was minister in charge of the pacifist (British) Fellowship of Reconciliation. He was active in community relations, broadcast ministry, and high school religious education. Now retired, Peter works as a clinical hypnotherapist and writer. He is married to Sonia Ness who is a musician and fellow hypnotist. He has two children, one stepchild, and three grandchildren. The couple live in Elk Grove Village, Illinois.