ALA Booklist
(Wed May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Four girls from different backgrounds and grappling with different issues come together for eight weeks in the Firefly Cabin at Camp Blueberry Pines. Lauren has been in the foster system for eight years. She is at camp on a scholarship, but she decides to reinvent herself for the summer. Isla has asthma and is self-conscious and self-critical. Still, she pursues a crush on a boy from the camp across the lake, even though she knows her parents would disapprove. Archer is artistic and angry, always in the shadow of her older sister, Makayla, who also attends the camp. Jade is still mourning the death of her best friend Kiara, for which she feels guilty. Together, they are the Fireflies, and they quickly form a strong bond. Although each harbors a secret, every girl chooses transparency and integrity. This is a solidly written and engaging novel with a focused, uncomplicated plot, and the characters are complex enough to be interesting and convincing. This is a pleasant middle-grade read that promotes honesty and friendship, without being preachy or saccharine.
Kirkus Reviews
Four preteen girls converge at summer camp for eight weeks and discover new truths about themselves and one another. Lauren, Isla, Archer, and Jade make up the girls of Firefly Cabin at Blueberry Pine Camp for Girls. Each girl has a reality that she's reluctant to share with the others. Lauren is an orphan, lives in a foster home, and can only afford to attend camp on scholarship. Isla has asthma as well as strict parents who won't let her attend coed dances. Archer has an older mean-girl sister who makes her life miserable. And Jade lost her best friend in a car accident that she's still convinced is her fault. This is adult romance writer Ellingsen's first book for children. While the story has an omniscient viewpoint, each chapter focuses on a different one of the four girls. When they're not grinning, giggling, mad, or in tears, the Fireflies are engaging in secret handshakes, declaring undying devotion to one another, or pushing the envelope of camp rules. Unsurprisingly, they eventually become self-reflective and resolve their challenges, all in prose that milks their emotional ups and downs. The four main characters are white, with diversity seen in peripheral characters.Captures the pace, spirit, and intensity of summer-camp friendships while occasionally leaning toward earnest, sentimental, and contrived. (Fiction. 8-12)