In this stand-alone companion to Krosoczka’s graphic memoir, Hey, Kiddo (2018), 16-year-old Jarrett spends a life-changing week at Camp Sunshine, a summer camp for seriously ill children and their families.
In 1994, artistic Jarrett, who flies under the radar at school, joins a diverse assortment of his Worcester, Massachusetts, high school classmates chosen to travel to Maine as camp volunteers. His one-on-one assignment is with Diego, who has advanced brain cancer and is a wheelchair user. Diego is withdrawn and uninterested in camp but is eventually brought out of his shell by Jarrett’s quiet companionship. The slice-of-life story follows activities and developing friendships at what is in most ways a typical summer camp, yet it’s one filled with kids in extraordinary circumstances enjoying the rare privilege of being ordinary. Krosoczka’s art has an appealingly painterly and deliberately loose style—it’s easy to see why the campers enjoy his cartoons. Especially notable is the limited color palette tending to grays, oranges, and yellows, like the titular sunshine playing across old photos. The matter-of-fact tone often, but not always, avoids leaning too hard into sentimentality. But ultimately this is a narrative in large part about inspiration provided by sick children to healthy people. This brings with it inherent and perhaps unavoidable issues with presenting the campers as lessons. The book is stronger when it prioritizes the reality of the kids themselves and gives their interior lives focus.
Loving and true but doesn’t always avoid cliché.
(author’s note) (Graphic memoir. 14-18)