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Good old Camp Harmony. Horseback riding, archery, and water-skiing on the crystal-clear Dray River. But the summertime fun screeches to a halt when campers are attacked by an apparently rabid porcupine, followed by a pack of wolves, the camp horses, and, soon, every mammal in the vicinity. As the horde of animals ravages the camp, infecting bite victims with a disease that kills them almost instantly, Heath and a small group of resourceful campers take to the safety of the river to escape the deadly critters, and each character's strengths and weaknesses are revealed as the group struggles to survive. Though Lettrick's debut suffers from some clumsy language and some contrived B-movie stereotypes iché characters (including an African American boy who dies early on in the attack); convenient plot twists; a relentless, three-digit body count; and a tidy, sunny, everything's-right-in-the-world epilogue aders who have chewed through Goosebumps or similar titles will appreciate the gruesome terror of this Night of the Living Dead meets The Island of Dr. Moreau story in a classic summer-camp setting.
Horn BookWhen a mutated rabies-like virus breaks out at a summer camp, a group of misfit campers works together to outwit the crazed animals and survive their lethal attacks. The cinematic plot puts a unique spin on the current zombie trend, but Lettrick's tendency to overwrite, using multiple metaphors, and his reliance on stock characters weighs down this horror story.
Kirkus ReviewsSummer camp turns deadly: fluffy, foaming, frenzied and deadly. Heath Lambert is settling in at coed Camp Harmony. He's made some friends, and with the help of new acquaintance Will, Heath avoids having to spend the summer running errands for the camp bully. Normal camp routines of horseback riding and postcard writing come to a screeching halt when the small (and not so small) woodland creatures suddenly all turn rabid. When they bite a human, purple lines spread over the victim, and they die instantly. Heath, Will and several others escape to the nearby river, since exposure to water seems to kill the animals on contact. The group decides the disease must be an airborne form of rabies, given the animals' symptoms. They travel down the river in hopes of reaching the nearest town, but the animals follow along on the riverbank, keeping the campers in sight. Can Heath and his friends survive the crazed animal attack? Lettrick's middle-grade debut is most successful during the many action scenes and in the slow reveal of certain facts about the characters. That it takes the old wives' tale that rabid animals are afraid of water and runs with it is acceptable, but the premise disintegrates at the end as the author forces events to reach his desired end. The character deaths are predictable, and the end, too tidy. Never achieves the scare it intends. (Horror. 9-12)
School Library JournalGr 6-9 What's not to love about Camp Harmony? Fourteen-year-old Heath likes the setting and activities, and he's even made friends. But the wolves are howling, the horses are skittish, and by the time the rabid porcupine goes on the attack, camp isn't so much fun anymore. Suddenly every single animal for miles around is frothing at the mouth and gunning for humans. Heath and the last remaining survivors attempt to make their way back to civilization, fighting not only the wildlife but their own demons. Among the gang are the fat kid, the bug-obsessed kid, horse-mad twins Em(ma) and Em(ily), the former bully, the little girl, and Machiavellian chess player Will Stringer, whom Heath describes as "operating on a whole different level than the rest of them, like Einstein or Batman." The pace is breathless (with a brief time-out for a swimming lesson) and the scenario plenty gory and horrifying. Heath is almost too good to be truesmart, compassionate, genuinely nice, and a natural leaderbut his secret explains a lot of that, and he's not annoying about it. Readers who like their horror strewn with corpses, leavened with compassion, and rooted in reality will find this one entertaining indeed.— Mara Alpert, Los Angeles Public Library
Voice of Youth AdvocatesAny story that takes place at summer camp is bound to have something bad happen. Frenzy is no exception. It starts off with a rage-filled porcupine chasing Cricket, a first-time camp attendee. Fortunately, water from Heath's squirt gun renders the rabid animal lifeless, and everyone is temporarily relieved. Next come the wolves, whose cries make them sound like they are out to kill something or someone. Soon after, animals are coming in droves from the forest to attack the young campers who are running for their lives. "Their wide black eyes were locked on his exposed flesh, eager to tear meat away from his body." The story follows those who survive and those who unfortunately succumb to a mysterious illness in which lethal bites cover the skin quickly in long purple vines.An over-the-top scenario that tugs at most people's fear of being attacked by an animal will entice readers. Those who like zombie-themed stories and a little bit of mystery will likely want to see the campers through to the end. While the characters have their own personalitieslike Will, who views life as a chessboard of moves that play out during their quest for survivalat times, they feel two-dimensional. Perhaps the combination of a forest full of rabid animals and people with real lives and problems is hard to sustain. Young readers looking for a quick read will likely overlook this and enjoy the tension Frenzy creates.Kelly Czarnecki.
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